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IBM
Debuts Talking Web Browser
Copyright ©1998 Internet
News.Com
[October 22, 1998] Aiming to provide Web access to the visually impaired,
IBM recently unveiled Home Page Reader for Windows, a talking Web browser.
The new tool is made to read aloud information found on a Web site and makes
it easy to navigate the Internet.
"We began this project with one clear objective--to minimize the information
gap between the sighted and the blind," said Chieko Asakawa, a blind researcher
at IBM's Tokyo Research Laboratory and a key player in the software development.
"Now, with this new software release, more people than ever will benefit from
the wealth of information available on the Internet. Using IBM's exclusive
fast-forward skim reading feature, the blind can obtain information from the
Web as quickly as the sighted."
Home Page Reader was developed originally in Japanese, but has been adapted
to read English. It uses IBM's ViaVoice OutLoud U.S. English text-to-speech
technology, working in conjunction with Netscape Navigator, to speak the information
clearly.
It also recognizes HTML tags and is able to translate text, tables, graphic
descriptions, text in column format and data fields, giving blind people the
same access enjoyed by sighted users.
Currently available in Japan, Home Page Reader for Windows 95, 98 and NT is
slated to become available in the United States in January 1999, and will
have a retail price of $149.
Download a trail version of the Home Page Reader, Here.
Original web page url http://www.internetnews.com/prod-news/1998/10/2202-ibm.html
IBM web page http://www.ibm.com
Date last modified February 13, 1999