Hi. If anyone has recommendations of good national news sites for this person, please let me know. Thanks, Ray Campbell, Help Desk Technician Adaptive Technology Center Chicago Lighthouse for People Who Are Blind or Visually Impaired 1850 W. Roosevelt Road Chicago, IL 60608 312-997-3651 (Voice/Relay) or 888-825-0080 (voice/Relay) [log in to unmask] AIM Screen Name: tclhelp From: G F Mueden [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 8:34 AM To: helpdesk Subject: Easy to read online news sources for the partially sighted Please be so kind as to pass this on to the persons who work swith your low vision clients. I think they may have the answer. I am searching for easy to read online news sources and would appreciate their help. Journalism's migration from paper to the Internet has carried over old habits of format that are unsuitable to the computer screen, making some online newspapers confusing and hard to read. Some do it better than others. The NYTimes and Reuters do well by providing the headlines with links to the articles. It is a matter of "scroll down" vs. "down up across down up across down up across, etc." I am not talking about mousing; I am taliking about eye movement. It is easier for me and more effective to keep my eyes ona small part of the screen and have the news scroll to it than have my eyes search the screen for things that interest me. It is like the old joke punch line: "You tell that dog to come 'round to where my eyes is restin". The NYTimes does it my way by every morning emailing me the headlines with a short paragraph for each, sorted by category (Nat'l, Business, Arts, etc). When I click in a headline it takes me to the story.. Not perfect, because they select only what they think are the top stories, but they do very well and it is better than fumbling around in a make believe paper. They put it all in one column with ads on the right. Reuters does it almost as well. They email me a set of headlines twice a day, single spaced, all on the screen at once, allowing for quick decisions as to which to read. Then, down below, they do it again, but with a paragraph. One column plus some goodies like links to photos, often very good. I would like to know of others who do better. Where should I be looking? Is there a public message board serving the partially sighted where this could be posted? How can I reach the support groups? Who is working on this, industry committees? Be of good cheer, ===gm=== G F Mueden NY NY 212-222-8751 [log in to unmask] VICUG-L is the Visually Impaired Computer User Group List. Archived on the World Wide Web at http://listserv.icors.org/archives/vicug-l.html Signoff: [log in to unmask] Subscribe: [log in to unmask]