Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
NonVisual Desktop Access (NVDA) is a free and open-source, portable screen reader [1] for Microsoft Windows. [2] The project was started by Michael Curran in 2006. [3]NVDA is programmed in Python.
Brazilian Portuguese screen reader. MSAA support. Latest info about it is from December 2007 [12] Linux Screen Reader (LSR) GNOME: Unix-like Free and open source (New BSD License) It was an alternative screen reader to Orca led by IBM started in 2006. However, it was ceased in 2007 when IBM focused their resources in other projects. [13] It ...
Sergio, an ambulance driver, and Valeria are a close-knit couple with an only teenage daughter, Mia. Twenty-year-old Marco suddenly enters their simple and happy life and insistently courts Mia. Marco gradually reveals himself to be a manipulator, who turns the fifteen-year-old's life upside down by controlling her cell phone, distancing her ...
A screen reader is a form of assistive technology (AT) [1] that renders text and image content as speech or braille output. Screen readers are essential to people who are blind , [ 2 ] and are useful to people who are visually impaired , [ 2 ] illiterate , or have a learning disability . [ 3 ]
A 2023–2024 screen reader user survey by WebAIM, a web accessibility company, found JAWS to be the most popular desktop/laptop screen reader worldwide for primary usage (at 40.5%), while 60.5% of participants listed it as a commonly used screen reader, ranking it second in this measure behind NVDA.
Narrator is a screen reader in Microsoft Windows. Developed by Professor Paul Blenkhorn in 2000, [ 1 ] the utility made the Windows operating system more accessible for blind and visually impaired users.
Orca is a free and open-source, flexible, extensible screen reader from the GNOME project for individuals who are blind or visually impaired. Using various combinations of speech synthesis and braille, Orca helps provide access to applications and toolkits that support AT-SPI (e.g., the GNOME desktop, Mozilla Firefox / Thunderbird , OpenOffice ...
The Linux Screen Reader (LSR) is a discontinued free and open source effort to develop an extensible assistive technology for the GNOME desktop environment. The goal of the project was to create a reusable development platform for building alternative and supplemental user interfaces in support of people with diverse disabilities.