Swimming in the Kool-Ade
      In case you missed the flurry of press releases and general buzz  
around the blinkosphere, Apple Inc. has continued its commitment to  
universal design out-of-the-box with the largest number of accessible  
products announced in a three week period. that I can remember  These  
include the brand new and much more powerful VoiceOver in the Snow  
Leopard operating system upgrade, a highly improved VoiceOver on the  
iPhone in its general purpose 3.1 release and a whole new and improved  
iPod line of products all with a stripped down VoiceOver included.   
Apple has shipped something like five new mainstream products that we  
blinks can enjoy without sighted assistance as soon as we take them  
out of their packaging.
I don't want to spend any time or space here in the blog describing  
the new features as I may mix up what is in which product and I will  
undoubtedly leave out someone's favorite feature or most annoying  
bug.  I will repeat the economic argument I made in the last blog post  
and talk a little about my attitude lately.
On the financial front, all of Apple's new line of products come to  
people with disabilities with the accessibility built in at the  
factory.  These are mainstream products so we get to enjoy the  
economies of scale that have forever existed outside the access  
technology world.  Using the universal design metaphor, though, lets  
us choose whether or not to buy a product without even contemplating  
the cost of the AT needed to make it useful.  So, the Snow Leopard  
upgrade costs us 30 bucks, the new fully accessible iPod Shuffle costs  
only 60 smackers and so on.  A new Macintosh laptop costs less than a  
single JAWS license and the iPhone is incredibly usable and so are  
many of the popular applications that are available for less than five  
dollars and some for free.  The out-of-pocket costs are minimal.
Back in the sixties, Esquire magazine featured a cover that depicted  
the great pop artist Andy Warhol swimming in a can of Campbell's  
Tomato Soup.  Andy loved the image and kept copies of the cover around  
in The Factory until his death.
If someone were to PhotoShop me in a glass of Apple grape Kool-Ade, it  
would not be an inaccurate representation.  I am overwhelmingly  
impressed by everything Apple has done over the past year as regards  
features that people with vision can use if they so choose.  This  
stuff is cool but not without flaw but I don't want to list bugs here  
as this item is about products released in a condensed period of time  
and not a review of said products, some of which (the iPods) I haven't  
even touched yet.
So where is the cynical, crusty old hacker jerk BlindChristian?  Well,  
I fell into a swimming pool of grape Kool-Ade and while I'd like to  
get out and turn on the grumpy old self, I find that as soon as the  
cynicism rises, Apple does some kind of minor update that fixes some  
problem I find annoying and their bug fix turn around is pretty amazing.
Also, from the start of BlindConfidential I have promoted the concept  
of access technology being built into mainstream products to provide  
the numbers of units needed to keep the costs under control.  Apple is  
doing this.  One might also ask if Microsoft's new attention to and  
financing of NVDA might be there answer to a no-cost blindness  
solution.  VO, however, has all sorts of slick documentation,  
tutorials and a hefty number of "experts" in its user community  
available to answer questions for others who need help.  I'm pretty  
sure NVDA has a good community of users as well but all of the slick  
documentation and tutorials do not seem to exist.
So, c'mon in, the Kool-Ade feels great when one swims in it.
Afterward
Look for a cynical, Gonz Blinko post soon.
-- End
1 Comments:
Blinks? I haven't heard of blinks and winks since Fidonet twenty years ago! Who first came up with those names?
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