Back in 2008, someone from Australia did a couple of webinars about the use of 
AutoHotkey for Project EASI.  I have been trying to track down his name and 
e-mail address, but with no luck this morning.  He worked for a university.  

He had developed an ingenious AutoHotkey script which looked at a portion of 
the screen where a waveform was displayed and generated tones depending on the 
color of that part of the waveform.  He had, in effect, created an audible VU 
meter.  If Window-Eyes can tell you the color at any particular point or small 
region, you may be able to make this work.  Just to let you know that this sort 
of thing has been done before, and should be possible again.  I'm sure that if 
anyone comes up with something along these lines, please post some results to 
the list.

Lloyd Rasmussen, Senior Project Engineer
National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped
Library of Congress
202-707-0535http://www.loc.gov/nls 
The preceding opinions are my own, and do not necessarily reflect those of the 
Library of Congress, N.LS

-----Original Message-----
From: net bat [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, May 07, 2010 12:27 AM
To: Rasmussen, Lloyd; [email protected]
Subject: golden records program

hi,
has anyone used the program golden records?
everything is accessible except for one thing.
it uses a graphical v u meter that does not speak.
is there any way to get some type of access to it so i would know what my 
recording level is set to?
it has low good and too high text. i tried hyper active windows  around the 
good in hopes that when the bars reached the  word good it would tricger the 
hyper active window but so far no luck. it does turn red when the level is 
too high. the v u meter is in the same place on the screen when setting up 
the level and while recording.

thanks if anyone can make it give some info. 

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