Question for #lowvision and folks using adaptive and assistive devices who are having trouble seeing offline or online. The problem is neurological damage, one from a stupid molly trick TBI long ago and the other a side effect to the occipital lobe. I got lucky, most went blind.
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My whole life I've had incredible vision, so acute I was nicknamed Eagle Eyed Molly. At 40, normal onset of need for reading glasses. My eyes are not the problem, they are normal thank heavens. Its traumatic injury to the visual areas of the brain's processing and I need help!
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Assistive devices: Better voice to text input on Android and iPhone. Some AIs are pretty good, like otter.ai - I'm a fast talking New York/New Jersey girl who has pressured speech clinically as well. HA! I drive these programs nuts. It's both embarrassing and funny
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I dislike audio for books. I dislike reading on a device. I want to hold a paper book in my hands. A cup of tea and kitty beside. I want to speak into a machine and have it not require me to use my hands, also impaired to a fatiguing degree. "RECTO auto" Is autocorrect to me.
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Dragon dictate has been around a long time. It is not interoperable, has a higher learning curve than I feel up to learning. I want large print, no special magnification but reading glasses required. Does it still exist and if so where? Libraries do digital/audio more now. ThxU
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About dictation software/interfaces, these aren’t what you want but UW HCDE came to mind as a hive of people who might help (e.g. hcde.washington.edu/news/luk… or hcde.washington.edu/news/goo… or maybe Denae Ford microsoft.com/en-us/research…
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From the handset voice text I found no single choice that works fast enough to keep up with pressured speech from a New Yorker who speaks fast and is hypervable to begin with LOL true story
Mar 1, 2023 · 6:56 PM UTC

