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  2. Orca (assistive technology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orca_(assistive_technology)

    The name Orca, which is another term for a killer whale, is a nod to the long-standing tradition of naming screen readers after aquatic creatures, including the Assistive Technology product on Windows called JAWS (which stands for Job Access With Speech), the early DOS screen reader called Flipper, [3] and the UK vision impairment company ...

  3. List of screen readers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_screen_readers

    All Platforms: Windows, Linux, Mac OS X, iPhone, iPad, iPods, Windows, Android etc.. Free TeleTender is a voice communication platform for sight impaired people, embedded with a cloud based screen reader. Users can interact with any web pages on the internet by issuing voice commands over the phone. To use it, just dial one of its access numbers.

  4. JAWS (screen reader) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JAWS_(screen_reader)

    Job Access With Speech (JAWS) is a computer screen reader program for Microsoft Windows that allows blind and visually impaired users to read the screen either with a text-to-speech output or by a refreshable Braille display.

  5. List of speech recognition software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_speech_recognition...

    Create speech commands to open files, folders, webpages, applications. Windows 7, Windows 8 and Windows 8.1 versions. [5] Voice Finger – software that improves the Windows speech recognition system by adding several extensions to it. The software enables controlling the mouse and the keyboard by only using the voice.

  6. Narrator (Windows) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narrator_(Windows)

    Windows 2000 was the first Microsoft operating system released with some degree of accessibility for the blind built in, permitting a blind person to walk up to any such computer and make some use of it immediately. The Windows 2000 version of Narrator uses SAPI 4 and allows the use of other SAPI 4 voices. The Windows XP version uses the newer ...

  7. Self-voicing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-voicing

    And in 2005 Charles L. Chen devised Fire Vox, an extension that adds speech capabilities to the Mozilla Firefox web browser on Mac, Windows, or Linux. [ 4 ] A second important category are broader self-voicing applications that function as what T. V. Raman calls "complete audio desktops", [ 5 ] including editing, browsing, and even gaming ...

  8. NonVisual Desktop Access - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NonVisual_Desktop_Access

    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.

  9. CoolSpeech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CoolSpeech

    CoolSpeech is a proprietary text-to-speech program for Microsoft Windows platform, developed by ByteCool Software Inc, founded in February 2001. [1] CoolSpeech controls text-to-speech engines compliant with Microsoft Speech API to fetch and read aloud text from a variety of sources, including websites, email accounts, local text documents (.txt, .rtf, .htm/html), the Windows Clipboard ...