Really? I didn't even know that existed!
On Jun 9, 2009, at 5:41 AM, ben mustill-rose wrote:

>
> Might aswell throw this out there since we're talking about general  
> vintage a t.
> I'm searching for a speaqualizer and am willing to pay if someone can
> sell me one that works.
> Fyi, it was a synth that plugged into a isa slot that was able to  
> read the bios.
>
> On 09/06/2009, Krister Ekstrom <kris...@kristersplace.com> wrote:
>>
>> Oh yes. We had several screen readers developed here in Sweden and
>> Denmark that we used along with the Swedish Infovox synths. Yes,
>> Infovox was Swedish in the beginning. We didn't use Asap or Jaws for
>> dos or any of the other screen readers. The only non-scandinavian
>> screen reader in use was Hal from Dolphin in England.
>> /Krister
>>
>>
>> 9 jun 2009 kl. 02.07 skrev Tiffany D:
>>
>>>
>>> Definitely not boring.  I didn't know that there were separate
>>> screenreaders for multiple languages back then.  The only synth I'd
>>> ever heard that could handle those was the Apollo.  Sothis is
>>> interesting to me at least.
>>>
>>> On 07/06/2009, Ignasi Cambra <ignasicam...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> All this stories are so fascinating...! Many of these computers you
>>>> guys are talking about are way older than me anyway... I started
>>>> using
>>>> DOS with a spanish screen reader called Habla. Well I think it was
>>>> developed in Spain, but I don't know if anyone else ever tried  
>>>> it. It
>>>> was kind of similar to JAWS for Dos. I used that thing with an
>>>> external synth connected through the serial port. The synth was  
>>>> made
>>>> in Spain too, and it was pretty fancy for the time. Well,  
>>>> actually it
>>>> might not be a spanish synth, I don't know. It had some very very
>>>> sharp braille dots on it that said "Ciberveu". No seriously, they
>>>> were
>>>> sharp enough that if you tried to read them with too much energy I
>>>> guess they could hurt you and everything! I was 7 or 8 years old by
>>>> then, so I only used Word Perfect and a dictionary that came in
>>>> some 6
>>>> or 7 disketes. I even had a really, really loud embosser that I  
>>>> still
>>>> use these days. After that I started using a PC with Windows 98
>>>> when I
>>>> was 10 or 11. It had a 1gb HD and 64mb ram. After going through all
>>>> those Windows PC's I finally got a Macbook aluminum and I can't be
>>>> any
>>>> happier with it...
>>>> Oh well, my story is obviously boring and uninteresting, but
>>>> somehow I
>>>> wrote it anyway...
>>>>
>>>> Ignasi
>>>> On Jun 7, 2009, at 5:01 AM, Krister Ekstrom wrote:
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Hi folks,
>>>>> I don't know if i have told you my computer history fully and if i
>>>>> had, feel free to skip this mail.
>>>>> I think i am one of the few blind people who actually started my
>>>>> computer experience in a graphical environment and loved it from  
>>>>> the
>>>>> start.
>>>>> The very first computer like thing i had was an Eureka A4, ya know
>>>>> those note takers with thermometer, clock, calendar and many more
>>>>> things on them. It had its own variation of Cp/m so it was a  
>>>>> command
>>>>> line interface. Then by accident or coinsidence or how one should
>>>>> say
>>>>> it, i and my work mates  stumbled upon Outspoken through an ad  
>>>>> in a
>>>>> paper. We decided to try it out since a work mate on my job back
>>>>> then
>>>>> had a Mac Se30 with System 7 on it. It so happened that one of
>>>>> rehabilitation people i knew had a copy of Outspoken in a drawer
>>>>> that
>>>>> he had discarded as useless some time ago. I asked if i could  
>>>>> borrow
>>>>> it and test it and got reluctant permission. Boy, was i glad  
>>>>> when i
>>>>> discovered that not only could i access the Mac, but i could use  
>>>>> it
>>>>> just as well as my sighted collegues, with the exception of  
>>>>> graphics
>>>>> editing. I got a mac myself, that is first we rented a Mac Classic
>>>>> with 80 Meg hard drive and i thought that "I'm never gonna fill  
>>>>> this
>>>>> gigantic hard drive". The experimentations went so well that i got
>>>>> my
>>>>> own Mac a Mac II Vx with 200 meg hard drive. This must have been
>>>>> around 1993 or something. I also had a Powerbook back then. This
>>>>> setup
>>>>> went with me until 1996 or thereabouts when i was more or less
>>>>> forced
>>>>> to switch to PC. Of course i was curious as to what one could do
>>>>> with
>>>>> a PC and Dos so that was one of the reasons i switched. As i had
>>>>> used
>>>>> Outspoken and loved it on the Mac, i decided to try Outspoken for
>>>>> Windows when it came out. It was quite good, but not as good as  
>>>>> the
>>>>> Mac version.
>>>>> Time went by and i tried various Windows incarnations, 95, 98 and
>>>>> XP,
>>>>> and now i'm back on the mac again and love it.
>>>>> One thing that i must mention before i finish this longish mail is
>>>>> that the only braille embosser compatible with the mac at that
>>>>> time in
>>>>> Sweden, at least that's what they said, was a big loud thing  
>>>>> called
>>>>> the Versapoint, anione remember that one? I never got that one to
>>>>> work.
>>>>> Well thanks for reading this looooongish letter of nostalgia.
>>>>> /Krister
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>
>
>
> -- 
> Kind regards, BEN.
>
> email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
> msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
> web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)
>
> >


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