go here@ www.cprograming.com use orlan bcc compiler it is a acceseble
. and  if u want c ++ lern then go here ..  www.tutorialspoint.com

On 5/23/19, Bharat Subbarao <subbara...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dear    Afzal,
> I tried to send mail to the e-mail id mentioned in access India but it
> did not go.
> It was nice reading the article.
> I am Bharath, a Visually impaired person living in Bangalore.
> I have done my B. A   Degree from I G N O U.
> I am interested to learn C,C+ programming course.
> Kindly let me know from where can I learn them.
> Waiting to hear from you at the earliest.
>
> Regards
> Bharath
> Mob-8748912832,9739507313
>
>
> On 5/23/19, MohammadAfzal <counsellor.af...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> You may reach me at counsellor.af...@gmail.com.
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> On 22/05/2019 01:20 pm, Navneet Dubey wrote:
>>> hello friends ,
>>> can any body provide the pranavlal , moham afazal and other persons
>>> writen in the artical. thanks
>>>
>>> navneet
>>>
>>> On 5/13/19, Shireen Irani <shireen....@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>> May 12, 2019, 16:05 IST
>>>>
>>>> Assistive technology is enabling the visually-impaired get a fair shot
>>>> at programming jobs
>>>> It's interesting to observe Alok Kaushik at work. You can see him
>>>> typing on a keyboard but there’s no screen. There's no mouse either.
>>>> Kaushik, a senior application developer with an e-commerce platform in
>>>> the UK who works with complex software, is blind. So he has no use for
>>>> a screen or a mouse. And he can code just as fast -- and well -- as
>>>> the next guy who can see. Coming to his aid is an assistive software
>>>> called 'screen reader' that converts written text into speech. That,
>>>> essentially, has changed his world.
>>>> Alok Kaushik, an IIT graduate, is now working as a senior app
>>>> developer in the UK thanks to an assistive software that converts
>>>> written text into speech
>>>> Thousands of miles away in Delhi, Pranav Lal, a cyber security expert
>>>> with Vodafone, can code fluently in computer languages like Python,
>>>> Java, C and C++. He, too, like Kaushik, is blind.
>>>> “I started by writing simple programs to help me with my school work,"
>>>> Lal, 38, said. Today, he can write complex code and has developed a
>>>> computer app – a speech recognition software -- for the
>>>> visually-impaired.
>>>> Lal is an avid photographer and has adapted vOICe -- an AI tool that
>>>> offers the blind the experience of live camera views through
>>>> image-to-sound renderings -- for the Linux operating system. Images
>>>> here are converted into sound by scanning them from left to right. It
>>>> associates elevation to pitch and brightness to loudness. “I 'saw' the
>>>> black hole using this tool,” Lal smiled.
>>>> “Who would have thought that the visually-impaired could do coding,”
>>>> said Arman Ali, executive director of National Centre for Promotion of
>>>> Employment for Disabled People, an advocacy organisation. "But with
>>>> technology, especially screen readers and artificial intelligence
>>>> (AI), the visually impaired are being integrated into the mainstream
>>>> workforce and are not limited to desk and accounting jobs anymore."
>>>> JAWS (Job Access with Speech) and NVDA (NonVisual Desktop Access) are
>>>> two popular screen readers while AI tools such as Microsoft’s Seeing
>>>> AI enables people with low or no eyesight to "experience" people,
>>>> texts and objects.
>>>> "Technology is still limited to a small fraction of India’s blind
>>>> population," Ali said. “We have to make it accessible to many more and
>>>> for that we need the government to look at disability as a development
>>>> issue and not a welfare issue.” He added, "For starters, the
>>>> government should make it mandatory for all websites to be accessible
>>>> with screen reader."
>>>> Mohammad Afzal, 36, who lost his eyesight in a car accident when he
>>>> was just 14, said programming for the blind these days "is no rocket
>>>> science". Employed as a counsellor with Saksham, an NGO that works
>>>> with the visually impaired in Delhi, he is busy teaching himself to
>>>> code. "I want to get a degree in cyber security," he said. "I am
>>>> learning Python, a programming language that’s similar to English and,
>>>> therefore, easy to pick up.” Afzal added that he uses apps such as
>>>> Ola, Swiggy, Google Maps, Twitter with ease on his smartphone using
>>>> screen reader.
>>>> To an untrained ear, the screen reader text sounds like a robot
>>>> reading out the hurried disclaimer at the end of insurance TV
>>>> commercial -- "Insurance is subject matter of solicitation…" -- but
>>>> the speed can be adjusted and so can the characters that you want the
>>>> reader to pick up. English is normally spoken at a speed of 120-150
>>>> words per minute. Screen reader can read up to 450 words per minute.
>>>> “"Technology is still limited to a small fraction of India’s blind
>>>> population. We have to make it accessible to many more and for that we
>>>> need the government to look at disability as a development issue and
>>>> not a welfare issue”
>>>> -Arman Ali, Executive director, National Centre for Promotion of
>>>> Employment for Disabled People
>>>> Dinesh Kaushal, a 43-year-old NVDA development manager with Publicis
>>>> Sapient, an MNC in Gurgaon, didn't have access to such technology
>>>> while completing his school education, but he made the best use of
>>>> what was available at the time.
>>>> As a student in a special school he was told that he couldn’t study
>>>> maths after Class 9 because of his impairment. He was born blind.
>>>> Dinesh Kaushal works with Publicis Sapient as NVDA development
>>>> manager. Born blind, Kaushal pursued maths despite challenges in order
>>>> to make a career in software development
>>>> Kaushal believes that students with visual impairment should be
>>>> encouraged to study maths and english so that they too can get a
>>>> chance to make a career in fields such as engineering and finance.
>>>> “I missed out most of the curriculum from classes 6-8 due to the lack
>>>> of braille text books,” said Kaushal, who went back to studying
>>>> mid-school math using audio books provided by the National Association
>>>> of Blind while preparing for an MCA (masters of computer applications)
>>>> exam. Today, he's a successful programmer with impressive credentials,
>>>> like developing the first open source screen reader, Screen Access For
>>>> all.
>>>> While technology has made great strides in opening up the world for
>>>> the blind, some blips still exist. For example, the coders we spoke to
>>>> complained that many websites, including popular applications, are
>>>> screen reader-incompatible.
>>>> “Most developers do not have a good understanding of web content
>>>> accessibility guidelines. The end result is a software that cannot be
>>>> used fully by screen reader. This could be significantly limiting, and
>>>> we are forced to either move to alternative solutions or rely on
>>>> sighted assistance,” said Kaushik, an IIT graduate who lost his
>>>> eyesight in his 30s due to a rare genetic disease. Kaushal adds that
>>>> including persons with disability in creating design and technology
>>>> solutions for them can help in overcoming this challenge.
>>>>
>>>> Source:
>>>>
>>>> https://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/...code/.../692...
>>>>
>>>>
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>>>>
>>>
>> --
>> Mohammad Afzal Khan.
>> Mobile :91 - 9718806099
>> Skype : counsellor.afzal
>> Impossible is the means of I M Possible
>>
>>
>>
>>
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