Microsoft XP does have a significant visual aid tool/option.
When you install/configure the OS, you can add the Visual Aid option.
This is really nice like a big magnifying glass.
Michael Vorel
Emerging Technologies Consultant
Bowne Business Solutions
555 5th Ave
New York, NY 10017
Voice - 212-351-9019
Cell - 201-240-8742
Fax - 212-351-9109
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Since we cannot know all that there is to be known about anything,
we ought to know a little about everything."
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662)
| "Day, Tim G." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
06/13/2003 01:26 PM
|
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] cc: "Graham-Banks, D'Artonya" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: [PDF-Forms] Tagged PDF Form for Visually-Impaired Accessibility |
If anyone has an example of a form that has been tagged for visually-impaired accessibility, please send it to me.� We have an employee who uses two of our forms, and unfortunately, he can hardly see at all.� The screen reader he uses is JAWS.
�
My co-worker and fellow forms designer experimented with the accessibility plug-in for Acrobat 5 a year or so ago, but it was apparently quite a struggle to tag a form correctly in order for a screen reader to process it correctly.� So we would greatly appreciate any tips or sample forms that address this issue.� (It's nice that Acrobat 6 has the Accessibility feature inherently included.)� Thanks.
�
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