Hello, there are generally two ways to make apps accessible. One way, commonly used, is to expose some sort of information to so called screen reader, which is responsible for presenting these information to user. The other way is to incorporate speech synthesis and/or Braille support directly into applications, which know best what they want to say, thus providing extended accessibility support for one particular application.
I'm not completely blind, I can use computer visually, but I can read Braiile. So I¨d like to have some sort of text viewer displaying its output on Braille display and being controlled mainly by Braille display buttons, which would run along with other app, controlled visually. Possible usage? E.g. reading docs on Braille while trying various techniques on app the docs are about, or reading game walkthru while playing a game. Would it be so hard to incorporate BRLTTY as extension into vim or emacs, so that their window contents would be displayed on Braille? Or provide simple plain text viewer with its output on Braille? I'd like to use such a tool on Windows. Tomas Valusek _______________________________________________ This message was sent via the BRLTTY mailing list. To post a message, send an e-mail to: BRLTTY@mielke.cc For general information, go to: http://mielke.cc/mailman/listinfo/brltty