If you checked the sending information for tha message, you would see  
that I CCed accessibility, along with the other messages I and others  
have sent them in the past.

Regards
Justin
On Aug 25, 2009, at 12:49 PM, Scott Howell wrote:

>
> And as I keep saying, make your concerns known.  It's one thing to
> state your feelings here, but quite another in stating them to Apple.
> If enough people really want this and write to Apple, then there is a
> very good chance it will appear on the right radar screens.  There is
> a number of features that ended up in Snow Leopard as a direct result
> of people making their wishes known.  So, send your suggestion to 
> accessibil...@apple.com
>  and keep reminding them from time to time.  If you think about it,
> this is how many features find their ways into many products.
> On Aug 25, 2009, at 3:22 PM, Justin Harford wrote:
>
>>
>> I've been thinking more about this other language synthesizers issue.
>> I wonder how hard it would be for apple to include by default the
>> voices that it uses for the iPhone on the installation CD of its
>> operating system.  That way, a blind person could manage bios and
>> system installation in multiple languages no problem.  And they would
>> be low quality voices right?  So they wouldn't take that much extra
>> space.  Then there could be some way by which we only put certain
>> languages on the hard drive through installation.  So maybe, if I
>> install my OS in Spanish, the CD will automatically only install the
>> Spanish synthesizers.  Or maybe, it could install all synthesizers by
>> default.  This would be nice for public computers, but if individuals
>> wanted the extra space, they could opt to not install those
>> synthesizers as they would opt to not install the extra language
>> localizations.
>>
>> Maybe I might offer another perspective on this.  On no screen reader
>> has there been offered a high quality voice like Alex.  In a way,
>> apple are already stomping on the shoes of Acapela Group slightly by
>> offering an american synthesizer which far out does anything their
>> american voices could dish out.  I think that standing behind apple  
>> in
>> not including other language synthesizers in Mac OS X because of fear
>> of hurting Acapela is a silly notion as it  places the interests of
>> business before the consumer, but let's discuss that anyway since it
>> is a concern.  Usually the place of a company like Acapela would be
>> supplying high quality speech synthesis, which it does very well, and
>> the place of the company that produces the screen reader would be to
>> just provide synthesis.  Freedom scientific have offered foreign
>> language with eloquence for a number of years now at no extra cost,
>> and of course the same goes for all screen readers using ESpeak.  The
>> idea is that you get to listen to stuff read in the language of your
>> choice, though it might not be the highest of quality.  If you want
>> high quality, you go to a company like Assistive Wear and buy the  
>> high
>> quality Acapela voices.  In a way, I would almost say that apple  
>> would
>> have done better to have implemented the iPhone synthesis along side
>> Fred and the other English voices, in stead of producing Alex, but
>> that's neither here nor there.
>>
>> The bottom line is that Apple is a company which, by its actions,
>> seems to aim to serve an international customer base.  It has been
>> possible for many years for a person in France, Germany, or Japan or
>> where ever else to install and use the Mac OS in their native
>> language.  I think that Apple has demonstrated that it understands
>> very well the importance of including a world market in its computer
>> revolution.  In 2005, they demonstrated that they also understood the
>> importance of including people who use their computers by alternative
>> means.  I remember an article from Apple to the developers a few  
>> years
>> back, which characterized the last 20 years in these terms… in the  
>> 90s
>> we were working on internationalizing computers so that people of
>> different nationalities could use them, then came the new millennium
>> where the new challenge has been working on making computers usable  
>> by
>> people of different physical/sensory ability.  One of the first  
>> things
>> I noticed about my iPhone is that the accessibility menu is just down
>> from international.
>>
>> It seems like then, apple understand accessibility and international
>> as two facets of a single goal, to make their computers usable by as
>> many people as possible.  They should understand that accessibility
>> and international are practically the same thing because there are
>> people with disabilities all over the world, not just in the United
>> States.  So yes, apple surely understand this, then there must be  
>> some
>> reason as was already suggested for why they insist on not
>> implementing foreign language synthesizers.  In conclusion, I think  
>> it
>> would be nice that they should include low quality foreign language
>> synthesis in their OS, or if not that, at least they should give us a
>> straight forward explanation of why they refuse to do so.  At least
>> this way, myself and others needn't be left so dumbfounded at the  
>> fact
>> that they would include such clever integration of foreign speech
>> synthesis and localization in their iPhone, and not in their
>> computers.  It really just doesn't make since.
>>
>> Regards
>> Justin Harford
>> On Aug 25, 2009, at 10:50 AM, Scott Howell wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> I think those voices were included for other reasons and happen to
>>> work with VO.  Of course Bells for example serves no purpose for
>>> users
>>> really, but I suspect they are again there for other purposes.  Of
>>> course you could always suggest to Apple they remove those voices if
>>> no one really has a use for them and replace with other voices,  
>>> which
>>> support other languages.
>>> On Aug 25, 2009, at 10:16 AM, william lomas wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>    hi all I know bad news, bells etc. are commical voices but aren't
>>>> they a waste of space in the OS, really?
>>>> Thoughts?
>>>> Will
>>>
>>>
>>>>
>>
>>
>>>
>
>
> >


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