Cheree Heppe here:

There has been a discussion about accessible apps for document scanning.

With this in mind, the following David Pogue article suggests lots of visual 
ways to photograph.  Since I am totally blind, I'm not going to be 
photographing any time soon because I can't be sure of the feedback.  However, 
scanning is a photographic process, at least, in part.

Why not contact these developers and see who can wow the document scanning 
landscape with an excellent, affordable, usable, app for document scanning?

Article below.


(Snip)
NY Times David Pogue on Tech news for Thursday 4/28/2011
                             Camera Whimsy on iPhones

         By DAVID POGUE

    "The best camera," the saying goes, "is the one you have with you."

    The chances are very low that your cellphone is your best camera; it
    doesn't zoom, can't take pictures in low light, can't freeze action and
    generally takes mediocre photos. But it's the camera you have with you
    most often. No wonder cellphones have become the most popular cameras
    on earth.

    Especially the [8]iPhone. Its camera is just O.K.-- it's a 5-megapixel
    job with decent color and clarity, as long as the subject is holding
    still. But lately, apps have been putting this thing on the
    photographic map. The iPhone is, let's face it, really an iComputer.
    And since it can be controlled through software, the world's
    programmers have wasted no time in examining the iPhone camera and
    adding to, or replacing, its features.

    This is no niche software category; we're not talking about
    recipe-management software or genealogy software. The photo-apps
    category on the App Store is teeming with options -- 4,000 of them
    priced at a dollar or two; 2,500 are free -- and they're hugely popular
    with iPhoners. Some of the apps are meant to replace [9]Apple's own
    camera app. Many more extend your creative options by adding filters,
    editing tools, time-lapse features and panoramas. Most have tendrils
    shooting right into [10]Facebook, [11]Twitter, Flickr and wherever else
    fine cellphone photos are shared online.

    To save you the four years (and thousands of dollars) it would take you
    to try out all 6,500 apps, here's a handy cheat sheet. These are the
    coolest, best and most useful photo apps for the iPhone, as recommended
    by my colleagues, my photographer friends and my Twitter followers.
    These apps are, to use the technical term, wicked cool.

    CAMERA-APP REPLACEMENTS The iPhone's camera-taking app is fine. But
    it's slow to start up, slow to save a photo, slow to focus. Turning the
    flash on or off is clumsy, requiring two taps on transparent,
    hard-to-read buttons.

    If you replace it with an app like QuickPix ($2), all of those problems
    go away. The app opens much faster than Apple's, takes photos much
    faster and can even snap stills while you're shooting video. The flash
    is a single icon that you tap on or off. Put this on your home screen
    where Apple's Camera app sits, drag Camera into a folder somewhere, and
    you'll miss a lot fewer shots.

    People also rave about Camera+ ($2) -- not because it's faster, but
    because it does so much more. The Stabilization feature, for example,
    ends blurry shots, because it doesn't fire the shutter until the
    phone's motion sensor detects that you're holding it still for a split
    second. There's a self-timer and two-a-second burst mode. You can crop,
    rotate or sharpen a photo, add a border and apply effects to it
    (black-and-white, sepia, and so on) -- and unlike most of the effects
    apps, this one lets you control the effect intensity.

    When you're finished toying, you can send your masterpiece directly to
    Facebook, Twitter, Flickr or e-mail. Pro Camera ($2) a similar, more
    crisply designed, more sprawling app, adds things like independent
    focus and exposure points (tap the screen), full color-correction tools
    and a 6X digital zoom that works surprisingly well. The high-end crowd
    swears by it.

    FILTER APPS A filter, in digital photo lingo, is a special effect:
    turning a photo black-and-white, for example, or making it look grainy,
    oversaturated, faded, ancient or in some other way degraded. (For some
    reason, apps that make your pictures look as though they were taken by
    cheap cameras in the '70s are all the rage.)

    For $1, you can't beat the attractiveness and creativity of 100 Cameras
    in 1. It works with both existing photos and new ones you take, and it
    lets you combine its effects (100 of them, get it?). The names of these
    filters are charming. They're called things like "Hurried and anxious,"
    "The warm chocolate that we ate slowly" and "A bold thing to say so
    early in the morning."

    One tap sends your doctored masterpiece to Facebook, Twitter, Flickr,
    Smugmug, Dropbox, e-mail or a printer.

    Hipstamatic ($2) is white-hot on iTunes these days. It turns the screen
    of the iPhone into a perfect replica of a cheap plastic toy camera of
    days gone by; by swiping your finger across the lens or the flash or
    the film window, you can choose different lenses, flashes or film
    types. It's just a glorified effects picker, and you have to pay extra
    for additional options. Still, it's cool and creative and really fun.
    (To see some of the results, visit Flickr.com and search for
    "hipstamatic.")

    The other buzz of the photo-app world is Instagram (free). Yes, it has
    a bunch of filter effects. But the real magic is in the way it's
    designed to share your photos. You sign up to receive the Instagrams
    from Facebook or Twitter folk. They (show up right in the app,
    scrolling up like a photographic Twitter feed. Seeing what other people
    are doing every day with their cameraphones and creative urges is
    really inspirational.

    SPECIALTY PHOTOGRAPHY Most people's iPhone ambitions extend no farther
    than snapshots. But there's no reason to stop there.

    Tilt-shift photography is easier to understand by seeing it (search
    "tilt shift" on Flickr.com) than reading about it. But in essence, it's
    a photographic trick that, by using selective angles and blurring,
    makes the real world seem to be made of tiny toys. Using apps like
    TiltShift Generator ($1), Tilt Shift Focus ($1) and TiltShift ($2), you
    can apply that effect to your own photos.

    Programs like Time Lapse ($1) let you lash down the phone -- or just
    prop it up somewhere -- and let it create a high-definition time-lapse
    movie for you automatically while you're away. Watch a building go up,
    watch a flower bloom or just see what's been going on at home while
    you're away.

    Panorama apps are plentiful and joyous; they combine multiple photos
    into one much larger, infinitely wide-angle whole, automatically and
    without a computer. For example, you can shoot a bunch of photos fairly
    sloppily using whatever camera app you prefer, and then feed them into
    AutoStitch Panorama ($2). It magically analyzes the resulting shots and
    combines them, beautifully. This app doesn't require you to line the
    left edge of each new photo with the right edge of the previous one,
    and it stitches photos both vertically and horizontally.

    Before you lay out the big two bucks, though, try [12]Microsoft's
    PhotoSynth (free). Yes, you read that right. It's a Microsoft app for
    the iPhone. And it's crazy amazing.

    You can shoot all around you, capturing entire interiors, for example,
    including floor and ceiling, one slice at a time. Each time you move
    the camera to a new view, there's a beep (hold it!) and then PhotoSynth
    snaps the shot all by itself The app uses the iPhone's gyroscope and
    motion sensor to figure out how you're holding the phone.

    It creates a seamless, panorama that you can navigate with your finger
    or post to Facebook, Bing Maps or [13]Photosynth.net, either as frozen
    images or as fully interactive, zoomable, pannable panoramas. Two
    words: Download this.

    Download Camera+ or ProCamera, too. You'll get a little bit of
    everything -- better shooting, cropping and editing, filters and
    effects, and direct posting to the popular online networks -- an
    all-in-one option that gives you a good taste of the possibilities.

    And best of all, you'll always have it with you.

    E-mail: po...@nytimes.com
(End snip)


Regards,
Cheree Heppe

Weblind consumers are not the only ones who need such an app.


Article below:

(Snip)

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