In 1995 Dr. Norman Coombs, a blind professor of history at the Rochester 
Institute of Technology and chairman of EASI: Equal Access to Software and 
Information wrote that the rapid adoption of a graphical user interface (GUI) 
would close the door on computing for the visually impaired. This was in 
largely in response to the Microsoft's Windows OS, but his point was well taken 
regarding all GUI based computing. Speech output systems, at that time, were 
based on character recognition and didn't work with a GUI that relied on icons 
and
 graphics. He wrote that many impaired users had lost their employment or found 
their positions downgraded because they could not function in the new GUI based 
environment.

Jump to 2010 and the introduction of the iPad. Many solutions were created 
along the way, but comparing that early state of affairs to what is now 
available on the iPad dramatically shows how far the field of assitive 
technology  has progressed. 

http://www.tuaw.com/2010/06/01/the-ipad-could-be-the-best-mobile-accessibility-device-on-the-ma/



      

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