Hi Jeremy,

The only problem here is that such a pamphlet is not relatively
expensive. As I mentioned yesterday in one of my posts the startup
costs for such a venture would be rather expensive assuming the person
doing the braille embossing had to purchase the braille embosser,
braille translation software, and of course the paper required to
produce the pamphlets. One might get a bit of financial break on
shipping if they are able to ship it via free matter for the blind,
but that is not always a guarantee in all places. Point being that my
primary concern here with such a venture is the bottom line to get
this started, and how much is each developer willing to toss into the
till to see this gets done assuming organizations would be willing to
redistribute it to their clients.

Cheers!


On 6/19/15, Jeremy Brown <tyr...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Dark,
>
> I understood your original intent, but I think you misunderstood mine
> somewhat.  What I was proposing was just such an introductory
> pamphlet.  It would be defrayed by a consortium of developers,
> distributed free through the organizations (assuming they would do so)
> and would have a list of contributors and their home page link.
> That's all.  No hard sale, just a list of contacts.  If I read such a
> piece as you describe I'd want to know how to find such things.  Such
> a brief description and a list of contributors could be perhaps no
> more than 5 pages of braille, would be relatively inexpensive to
> produce, and would give each contributor a chance to get their name
> out.  I have to admit, I said ad space, but I was thinking more in
> lines of contact info.  Anything much more than that, and you'd be
> likely to either lose your audience or never get it to them through
> the organizational roadblocks.
>
> I think Dentin's comments earlier are an important indicator in this
> line: we'd have to sell this to the organizations as both a. helping
> visually impaired entrepreneurs and b. providing a quality of life
> improvement to some of their members in terms of accessible
> recreation.  While the organizations for the blind generally promote
> political action and/or community support for visual impairment, most
> of them also pay lip service to both of the above goals.
>
> Take care,
>
> Jeremy
>
>
> --
> In the fight between you and the world--back the world! Frank Zapa
>
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