Hi Thomas,
this is actually sad.
And I don't mean you explaining to me how certain things work.
But since you don't know me personally, I can tell you that I was supposed to know such things. In my country Germany, there are two ways to learn about software development.
The first way is to go to university and study relevant subjects there.
And there is the other way, where you are trained by either a company or by a school for the blind.
In this case your training would take three years.
Half that time would be working either in a real company or in one created for training but with realistic simulations of the things you would do in a real company.
The second half is to go to school learning all the theory you need.
At the end of your three years you would have to take a certain written exam which is the same for everyone who wants to go this route in Germany and to which blind aspiring software developers also have to follow the same rules. The sad fact however is that we had one blind teacher who did not teach us enough in regards to how software, the operating system or Windows work against each other or with each other. My so called training was practically a waste of time, allthough it was formally correct by the educational standards under which it is governed.
I know a visually impaired friend who also wants to be a software developer.
He is looking for a job but hasn't found anything good yet.
I fully believe that one half of his problem is because many companies might not want a visually impaired worker in their ranks. But lately I have come to think that it is more due to the messed up education in ghis field when you don't want to go the university route...
I won't go more into detail here, since it is really off-topic.

Originally I wanted to know why such programs like Dosbox are not accessible (Flash, too). Now I know that their developers did not consider accessibility when designing them. On the other hand, I also wondered why the screen reader developers did not atempt to create solutions on their own, since I know that the moment the internet became easy to use for everyone, multimedia technologies were developed and deployed. But since it was mainstream at that time, it was strange to not see major screen reader developers atempting to make their own solutions until a form of communication might have been established with the technology developers or until there were more worldwhide accepted standards or guidelines to follow.

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