AccessTech News

Accessibility issues, advocacy, assistive technology and general technology news for people with disabilities.

  • Categories

  • Blog Archives

  • Disclaimer:

    This site is for informational purposes only, and is not intended as an offer, solicitation or reccomendation for the purchase or sale of any product or service featured within. Information herein is believed to be reliable, but the editor does not warrant its completeness or accuracy.
  • Blog Stats

    • 47,213 hits
  • Top Posts

  • Spam Blocked

Archive for June, 2009

Charlotte school district settles special-ed suit

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

Judge says district’s response was ‘grossly inadequate’; Family to get $125,000 From the Charlotte [NC] Observer: Eleven-year-old Brandon Hawkins and his younger brother Jeremy have Batten disease. The rare neurological condition causes steady deterioration of vision, strength, and mental capacity, and often leads to an early death. It has no cure. Ever since Brandon was in kindergarten, his [...]

Charlotte school district settles special-ed suit
Patricia Bauer
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 02:51:02 GMT

Posted in Disabled, Education, Government, Legal Briefs, News, Special Education | Comments Off

D.C. charter schools fend off kids with disabilities, official says

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

From the Washington Post: A federal court monitor has found that the admissions practices at some D.C. public charter schools discourage the enrollment of students with disabilities. The monitor, Amy Totenberg, said some charters explicitly limit the number of hours of services they provide to students with disabilities and counsel parents to go elsewhere. D.C. charter [...]

D.C. charter schools fend off kids with disabilities, official says
Patricia Bauer
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 19:44:27 GMT

Posted in Disabled, Education, News, Special Education | Comments Off

Seven Deadly Sins of Social Networking Security

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

Admit it: You are currently addicted to social networking. Your drug of choice might be Facebook or Twitter, or maybe Myspace or LinkedIn. Some of you are using all of the above, and using them hard, even IT security practitioners who know better.

Seven Deadly Sins of Social Networking Security
(Bill Brenner)
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 17:05:00 GMT

Posted in Security Net | Comments Off

Kalalau’s Korner – YES to AUDISM

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

A discussion vlog: Carl Schroeder explains that Church people and believers used to say no to Galileo Galilei’s discovery in the 16-17th century that the earth rotates around the sun. Today there are certain people who say no to Audism, the term indicating that it’s better to hear than to be Deaf.

Kalalau’s Korner – YES to AUDISM
Kalalau’s Korner
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 09:31:03 GMT

Posted in Advocacy, Awareness, Deaf, Hard of Hearing | Comments Off

Video Helps Financial Advisor

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

Louis Schwarz is a financial adviser in Bethesda, Maryland. Schwarz is deaf and uses video relay to keep in touch with his clients. A senior managing partner at Schwarz Financial Services, Schwarz has offered money advice for more than a quarter of a century. His company has invested in ten videophones and find that many of the firm’s new clients come from outside the DC area, thanks to the new

Video Helps Financial Advisor
Deaf News Today (noreply@blogger.com)
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 14:55:00 GMT

Posted in Awareness, Deaf, Finance, Hard of Hearing | Comments Off

Caregivers worry: Will rise in adults with autism swamp system?

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

From the Sacramento Bee: Parents and disability advocates say they’re worried about the tidal wave of young people with autism who are moving toward adulthood in a society unprepared to meet their needs. It is estimated that some 380,000 people will need extensive adult autism services by 2023, and the pricetag for their care will be in [...]

Caregivers worry: Will rise in adults with autism swamp system?
Patricia Bauer
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 02:07:49 GMT

Posted in Adaptive Tech, Autism, Awareness, Caregiving, Government | Comments Off

NJ autism insurance law on governor’s desk

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

From AP/Philadelphia Inquirer: New Jersey governor Jon Corzine is expected to sign a measure, passed by the state legislature, that would expand health insurance coverage for autism and other developmental disabilities. The bill would require insurers to cover the cost of autism treatments deemed medically necessary, including behavioral intervention and speech, physical and occupational therapy. The measure [...]

NJ autism insurance law on governor’s desk
Patricia Bauer
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 23:06:52 GMT

Posted in Advocacy, Autism, Government, Legal Briefs, News | Comments Off

Health Buzz: Diabetes Drug Setback and Other Health News

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

Getting a brainpower boost from exercise; a new resource for couples in search of an egg donor

Health Buzz: Diabetes Drug Setback and Other Health News
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 15:34:00 GMT

Posted in Health Watch | Comments Off

Toyota thinks up mind-reading wheelchair

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

(Credit: PopSci.com)

Last week, we told you about Mindflex, a Mattel toy that lets players move objects with their brains. This week comes word that the same technology is making its way into a more functional application–a wheelchair that users can maneuver with thought alone.

Toyota has developed the wheelchair in collaboration with researchers in Japan. The system analyzes brain wave data using signal-processing technology and delivers neuro-feedback to the driver.

Brain wave-detecting technology, or electroencephalography (EEG), isn’t new. In layman’s terms, a device, usually a cap wired with sensors, detects a person’s brain waves. That information is analyzed by a computer and applied to the device in question. Scientists have pursued the technology for decades, but have had difficulty achieving short response times, explains the Associated Press.

Toyota’s mind-controlled wheelchair, however, has what appears to be the quickest response time yet: 125 milliseconds, or 125 thousandths of a second. The user can almost instantly steer right, left, and forward. To stop, the person in the chair must puff up a cheek, a motion that’s then detected by the headpiece.

Because of this quick response time, plans are under way to turn the wheelchair into a commercial health care product. The most practical use would be for rehabilitation patients who have been paralyzed, suffered a stroke, or have other conditions that hinder their muscle control. So far, the research has centered on brain waves related to imaginary hand and foot control. However, Toyota hopes the system could ultimately be applied to brain waves generated by emotions.

Toyota thinks up mind-reading wheelchair
Sharon Vaknin
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 23:13:00 GMT

Posted in BioTech, Disabled, News, Research | Comments Off

Cool idea–reading radio broadcasts

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

HD Radio provides more than great digital sound, it can also carry text. National Public Radio is planning on broadcasting closed-captioned text of talk shows along with the audio. Radio receivers with screens will allow folks who are deaf, or those of us who need the visual to understand hard-to hear words or phrases listen and READ radio broadcasts. These receivers are planning to come out in late 2009.
Check out

Cool idea–reading radio broadcasts
Kelly Ligon
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 23:19:46 GMT

Posted in Closed, Deaf, HD Radio, Hard of Hearing | Comments Off

FAQ: Making sense of the Windows 7 upgrade options

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

CNET News’ Ina Fried walks through the basics and the fine print on Microsoft’s options for those that want to make sure they get the latest operating system from Redmond.

FAQ: Making sense of the Windows 7 upgrade options
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 11:00:00 GMT

Posted in Tech Tips, TechBits, Tips and Tricks | Comments Off

Firefox 3.5 vs. Chrome 3 Showdown, Round 1: How private is private browsing?

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

Special Series banner

This is the week that the Mozilla organization is expected to unveil what may very well be the most significant half-point release in its history: the 3.5 edition of the Firefox browser. While Betanews tests confirm the new version literally blows away its own predecessor in terms of speed, operating two-and-one-half times faster in page rendering and functionality on average, your own eyes will tell you it’s a much faster browser.

And those same eyes will tell you that Google Chrome is already a much faster browser, by virtue of a supremely fast V8 JavaScript engine that its developers have been refining since version 1 made its debut last year. In recent Betanews tests, the Chrome 3 beta has overtaken the stable release of Apple Safari 4 as the fastest Web browser publicly available, posting a performance index score that’s 83% faster than Firefox 3.5 RC3 on Windows XP SP3. So while Firefox has made extremely significant gains, it may take open source developers until version 4.0 for it to catch up with Chrome in the speed department.

Firefox’s developers tell Betanews that version 3.5 makes up for that gap in the functionality department, by providing tools and resources that Chrome currently cannot match. We decided to test that theory for ourselves, with a new series of tests that pits the two most viable choices for alternatives to Microsoft Internet Explorer against one another in everyday, real-world tasks.

Chrome users have already come across that browser’s "Incognito" function, which brings up a window exclusively for pages whose history and cookies will not be tracked permanently. Firefox 3.5 formally inaugurates a similar feature with "Private Browsing." Yes, we know there’s stuff that folks don’t want their bosses knowing they’re looking at. But the other typical use-case scenario involves folks who are shopping for gifts for other members of the household, and they want those gifts to be secret.

There are certain things that do need to be remembered during an online shopping experience. You find things, you compare them, you make notes, you do research. So our question was, is each browser capable of remembering what it needs to remember and forgetting what it needs to forget?

Our first simple test begins with the "shopping cart" (if either browser fails this test, it shouldn’t be shipped). Most shopping sites can maintain a running shopping cart list for their customers, even when those customers aren’t logged in. In order for sites to do this, it needs to maintain some kind of session state, which requires a cookie. So this does mean that Incognito / Private browsing maintains cookies, although they should go away after the session ends. At least that sounds about right.

To make sure this is indeed the way these features behave, I started shopping carts on the Web site of one of my favorite tech gear suppliers, Xoxide.com. Here, as is the case with most sites, you don’t have to log on as a returning customer to launch a shopping cart. Xoxide is having a Fourth of July sale, and I like to check out the deals in case I want to build yet another computer. My wife might not appreciate yet another glowing receptacle of whirring electronic mayhem adorning our already wire-strewn household, so I begin by shopping incognito with Chrome 3.

Google Chrome 3's Incognito window co-exists with its main window, and both clearly have different user sessions.

Chrome lets you run a standard window alongside the Incognito window, and marks the latter with a little "cloaked spy" icon in the upper left corner. As I start building a little near-term history, my first fear is that it will have some impact on the non-private history outside the Incognito window. So in the main Chrome window, I pull up Xoxide, and I discover that window does not perceive the same shopping cart. That’s good.

Next, is there any chance that the history buffer in the main window would "remember" the URL for checking the shopping cart from the Incognito window? With Xoxide, as it turns out, there’s one URL for checking the active shopping cart — and having already done that in the main Chrome window, I’ve messed up my test. So I have to rig a similar test using a different retailer: Newegg.com. With Newegg, the shopping cart’s URL begins with a different prefix, secure.newegg.com. When I begin typing "secure" in the main window’s address bar, it does not offer to complete my URL with the shopping cart name from the other window. More good news.

Firefox 3.5’s Private Browsing mode works a bit differently: You can’t have both private and non-private windows open simultaneously. You have to exit Private Browsing mode (which is marked with the phrase "Private Browsing" in the title bar) to return to standard mode. With Private Firefox, I started a fresh Xoxide shopping cart and chose something new. Then to check whether I left any trail, I exited Private mode and checked Xoxide in the main window. Shopping cart is empty, and there’s no trail of it in the history buffer of the "Awesome Bar," which is what I expect.

Next, I return to Private mode. Here is where the "experience" changes: When you exit Private Browsing mode in Firefox 3.5, that is when you erase your trail. Your shopping cart ceases to exist at that point, which truly means Firefox works as advertised.

Next: The trail unravels…

When you exit Private Browsing mode in Firefox 3.5, you cannot pick up the trail again from where you left off — anything your browser remembered up to that point, has vanished.

Does the Incognito Window in Chrome work the same way? Surprisingly, no — and this is where one starts evaluating the browser makers’ design decisions. If you exit the Incognito Window ("Nothing, honey, wasn’t doing anything…just checking statistics")re-enter it again, and then re-enter the page you were on, you’ll find your shopping cart is intact, right where you left it. So exiting that window did not erase your trail.

But suppose that’s what you want — suppose you want to be able to hide the Incognito window on demand without destroying your shopping, should prying eyes happen to walk by. That actually makes this feature somewhat handy — for the time being, Chrome is remembering something you want it to forget later.

At least, isn’t that what you expect…for Chrome to forget it later? What happens when you exit Chrome altogether…does it forget your shopping cart then? No. Start up Chrome again, and your shopping cart is alive and well. And that could be a problem. This suggests that for any one Windows user account, there is a general track and an incognito track. When you exit Windows altogether, and restart Windows and Chrome, that’s when you find out your shopping cart and history have been wiped clean. So the session key Chrome generates for Incognito is apparently only good for the current Windows session, and that’s fine. But it still suggests that some session data is being maintained somehow while you’re in Incognito mode, and that may not be what you expect.

Firefox 3.5's Private Browsing window runs solo only, but once it's gone, it leaves nothing behind.

Sometimes the best software behavior you can have is the kind you expect, regardless of whether it’s the most convenient. Firefox erasing your tracks the moment you exit Private Browsing may not always be convenient — you’re covering your tracks, but also destroying anything you’ve accomplished in the interim. But Firefox says that’s what it does, and that’s what it does.

When Chrome’s Incognito Mode first premiered, there was some concern from users who discovered that even though they used Incognito to log onto Google’s services, Google’s own Web history remembered their logins. But frankly, that’s what users should have expected: You can’t tell a server to which you’ve just logged in to not remember you just because you’ve opted not to remember it. That may cause an inconvenience for someone who uses Google tools to remember his history, but if he reasons things out in his mind, it’s an inconvenience that can be expected and anticipated, and perhaps therefore avoided.

Google suggests that users who really do want their tracks dis-remembered immediately, use the Ctrl+Shift+Delete method (actually pioneered by Firefox) to selectively remove a day’s worth of browsing history. Well, if that’s the solution to the privacy problem to begin with, then remind me again why we even need Incognito mode?

Firefox’s Private Browsing is plain, it’s less flexible, and it’s actually a little dull. But it does what it says it does and behaves the way one should reasonably expect. That’s why I’m judging the victor in Round 1 of this duel to be Firefox 3.5. If Chrome had given me even so much as a warning about not clearing my history yet, or an option to either retain my Incognito history for the duration of the Windows session or not, then I would have scored this one for Chrome.

Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2009
 

Firefox 3.5 vs. Chrome 3 Showdown, Round 1: How private is private browsing?
Scott M. Fulton, III
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 20:03:30 GMT

Posted in TechBits | Comments Off

Sneak Peek: What’s On Tap for Firefox in 2010

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

firefox-logoIt has been just shy of two weeks since the first release candidate of Firefox 3.5 became available for download, and reports say that the latest version of Firefox should go official tomorrow. Yet already, the Mozilla team is wasting no time in preparing for Firefox 3.6 — the next, next big version of the world’s second most popular web browser.

Scheduled for early-to-mid 2010, Firefox 3.6 promises a number of major feature improvements over the current generation, so much so that it could actually see a bigger number jump (in the same manner that Firefox 3.5 was originally called “3.1,” until its newness made it more than just an incremental release). To avoid confusion, then, developers at Mozilla often refer to Firefox 3.6 as “Firefox.next” or refer to it by its codename, “Namoroka,” named for a national park in Madagascar. So what’s on tap for users in Namoroka? Here’s a sneak peek, though keep in mind that this early in the development cycle, things are bound to change.


Top Priority Changes


The following are top priority changes and additions for the Firefox.next team. These are generally not cosmetic enhancements, but things that will have a real, noticeable effect on how you use the browser and how it performs.

Better Peformance – For Firefox.next improving browser performance is one of the biggest goals. That means “dramatic, human-perceivable speed increases,” such as getting startup time, and the time it takes to do common tasks like open a new tab, open a bookmarked page, or complete an address in the Awesomebar to under 50ms. One of the main areas of focus for Firefox 3.5 was improved JavaScript performance via the new TraceMonkey JavaScript engine, which means faster, more responsive web apps. For the next version, performance improvements will be felt in how the browser itself functions.

More Personalization and Customization Options – One thing that has always made Firefox stand out, is how easily you can change the look, feel, and functionality through themes and add-ons. In Firefox.next, one of the top priorities is a long talked about “light weight” framework for themes and add-ons that would allow you to load them up without restarting the browser. That would make testing out new personalization and customizations a much easier and faster process.

awesomebar-ubiquity

New Navigation Options – Mozilla wants users of Firefox.next to be able to organize their tabs based on the task they are attempting to accomplish. That means adding the ability to search for existing tabs, and the ability to navigate by tag, date, or source metadata, which could borrow from the unconventional navigation elements in Mozilla’s Ubiquity project. Lower priority enhancements to Firefox navigation in this area include giving users the ability to create, save, restore groups of tabs, and adding some light file management features — such as copy, move, and delete — to the download manager.

Better Web App Support – Web apps are a huge part of Mozilla’s vision for the future of computing, which is why Firefox.next will add better support for them. For the next version of Firefox, this means an improved interface for uploading files to websites, but more importantly it means the ability to save web pages as applications. That likely points to an integration of the Prism project, which is a Firefox extension that lets users pop web applications out of the browser and run them directly on the desktop. Helping web applications run and feel more like their desktop counterparts could be an important part of bringing web apps to a mainstream audience.

prism-menu


What Else is Being Considered?


In addition to the main focus areas mentioned above, Mozilla is also considering a number of other features and changes for Namoroka. Many of these might never find their way into the next version of Firefox, but a few of them very likely will.

TaskfoxTaskfox is a recently announced project at Mozilla to bring some of the experimental Ubiquity user interface and navigation paradigms to Firefox. Some of those navigation features are higher priority and will more likely find their way into Firefox.next, but if there’s time, we could actually see a lot more of Ubiquity in the next big version of Firefox.

Better Session Management – I already mentioned that the ability to create, save, and restore a group of tabs is a low priority addition for Firefox.next, but this would be such a hugely useful feature that it deserves a second mention. Firefox can currently save and restore session data when you shut down the entire program or suffer through a browser crash, but there’s not really a good way to just save a set of tabs and put them aside for later, which is something I often want to do when researching multiple posts. The best option right now is just to bookmark tabs or save them elsewhere (like in a text file or on Delicious) — those aren’t very good options.

about-me

Personally Customized Browser – Mozilla is tentatively planning for a Firefox that can adjust itself based on how you surf the web. That means things like personalized form and search fill-in features, and a new “about:me” page that gives you statistics about your browsing history and behavior.

Identity Management – There’s not much information about what this means, but Mozilla is again talking identity management as they did before Firefox 3.0. Back then it meant things like OpenID and CardSpace — we’ll have to see what it means this time around.

New Tab Page – One of the coolest features of Google’s Chrome browser is their new tab page, which shows users their most frequently visited web sites when they open up a new tab. Firefox might be planning to follow suit in version 3.6 with something perhaps similar to the proposed new tab page prototype they showed off in March.

new-tabs2

What other features would you like to see in the next version of Firefox? Let us know in the comments.


Sneak Peek: What’s On Tap for Firefox in 2010
Josh Catone
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 21:46:52 GMT

Posted in TechBits | Comments Off

Mozilla Pushes the Web Forward With Firefox 3.5

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

Firefox 3.5 is released. We show you what’s new and tell you why you should download it right now.

 

Mozilla Pushes the Web Forward With Firefox 3.5
Scott Gilbertson
Tue, 30 Jun 2009 04:00:00 GMT

Posted in TechBits | Comments Off

WATI Free Online AT Resources on Talk Radio Show

Posted by rbwatson1 on June 30, 2009

 

Jill Gierach of Wisconsin Assistive Technology Initiative (WATI) was my guest this morning on No Limits 2 Learning Live!
LISTEN NOW!
We had a great time discussing the resources in their Assessing Student Needs for Assistive Technology manual, (4th edition pdf link here). They are working on a 5 th edition that will be aimed at RTI and curriculum content areas more specifically in organization.
You can also listen on my blog player on the sidebar and access older shows there in the list.
All the best to you!
Lon


Bookmark this on Delicious

Check out more at http://nolimits2life.com/blog

WATI Free Online AT Resources on Talk Radio Show
Lon (noreply@blogger.com)
Mon, 29 Jun 2009 18:02:00 GMT

Posted in Assistive Tech, Awareness, Education, Hardware, News, Radio, Software | Comments Off