[bksvol-discuss] Re: Are volunteers really that important anymore?

  • From: Melissa Smith <mdsmith25@xxxxxxxx>
  • To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 30 Aug 2009 08:16:32 -0500

I download all of my books in Daisy, and I certainly appreciate having the headings to easily navigate to, as well as the page numbers, especially when reading nonfiction.


Melissa



Chela Robles wrote:
Depends on what they prefer, Cindy, for example, I like to read technical books in Daisy and others in brf, also depends on what I use to listen to it, my pac mate has a daisy player called FSReader and I'm going to start using it. It also depends on what I'm in the mood for, Chela hopes she didn't confuse anyone sighted on this list, grin!

    ----- Original Message -----
    *From:* Cindy <mailto:popularplace@xxxxxxxxx>
    *To:* bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
    <mailto:bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
    *Sent:* Thursday, August 27, 2009 3:40 PM
    *Subject:* [bksvol-discuss] Re: Are volunteers really that
    important anymore?

    I'm curious. Don't blind people use Daisy as well as or instead of
    Braille? I was under the  impression  (possibly the
    mis-impression) that that was how people  listened to the books on
    bookshare

    Cindy

    Wish List (i.e., books wanted added to the collection) and
    books-being-scanned list available at sites below



    Wish List: https://wiki.benetech.org/display/BSO/Bookshare+Wish+List

    Books Being Scanned List:
    https://wiki.benetech.org/display/BSO/Books+Being+Scanned+List

    --- On *Thu, 8/27/09, Denise Thompson /<deniset@xxxxxxx>/* wrote:


        From: Denise Thompson <deniset@xxxxxxx>
        Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Are volunteers really that
        important anymore?
        To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        Date: Thursday, August 27, 2009, 2:37 PM

        Judy

        I'm behind the times. I didn't realize BS had broadened it's
        focus. I'm glad if it benefits you. I just don't want people
        who are blind to get lost in the process since that was the
        original reason for BS's existance. Right now all I know is
        that its getting harder for us to contribute. Probably we've
        gone about as far as we can with this discussion on the list.
        Hopefully BS staff are listening and will consider what has
        been said.

        Denise



        At 12:38 PM 8/27/2009, you wrote:
        > Denise, you asked about who is benefiting from all the
        changes.  I can certainly understand your frustration. smile
        >
        > I think that many of the the changes are coming about
        because Bookshare's members are expanding to include more
        disabled individuals like myself who are fully sighted but
        have other serious disabilities that prevent us from reading
        printed books.
        >
        > A bookshare book that "sounds" fine to a blind individual is
        often virtually unreadable to a sighted disabled person who
        relies on visually reading the book from their computer screen.
        >
        > Imagine listening to a book where the narrator is randomly
        shouting one word, whispering the next, or stopping in the
        middle of a sentence then starting again as if it were a new
        sentence. It would be an unpleasant experience to have to read
        books if this was the norm.
        >
        > That's the equivalent of what it's like to visually read a
        book that hasn't had the formatting of a book cleaned up in
        the way that's now being suggested. smile.
        >
        > Things in written text that don't make a difference to a
        blind reader make an enormous difference to a sighted disabled
        reader.  For example, having the chapter titles in larger
        fonts makes a huge difference in readability for visual
        navigation, too, not just for DAISY navigation.
        >
        > One thing that doesn't make much difference to me at least,
        however, is the inclusion of images in fiction books, as least
        those that are geared towards a young adult or adult audience.
        They're nice to have, sort of like having a narrator who can
        speak in different accents for different characters in a book,
        but not necessary.  smile.  The same might be true of
        mostly-picture-books for children, but I can't speak to that.
        >
        > I hope that gives at peek into why I believe some of the
        changes are happening.  smile.
        >
        > Judy s.
        >
        >
        > Denise Thompson wrote:
        >> I think we have noticed it, but no one right now is
        prepared to deal with it since it was once the foundation of
        the organization itself. It was one of the big draws in the
        beginning which led to many news stories and funding.
        >> The other issue for me is who is benefitting from all the
        changes. I mean the changes in terms of the correct
        preciseness of books scanned now. Certainly phe push to get
        rid of garbled text and scannos is wonderful and can easily be
        done today with impprooved OCR software. The other things
        though I wonder. It's true that I read in the Daisy format
        very seldom. Mostly I quickly convert my books to text and put
        them on my phone to read. When I'm listening to a book, it
        sounds exactly the same to me if it has paragraph marks at the
        end of each line or double paragraph marks for real
        paragraphs. It sounds the same if chapter titles are in 16
        point font or in 12 point. The only real factor that affects
        me as a blind person listening to the book is the cleanness of
        the scan. I know that the other factors mentioned work better
        in a Daisy translation and create better divisions on a daisy
        player. Perhaps for text books this is more important, but for
        reading for pleasure, it makes no difference in listening, but
        makes a whole lot of difference in scanning, proofing and
        getting a book accepted into the library.
        >> My last thought on this is a concern about pictures. I
        foresee a time when people who are blind will no longer be
        able to scan because it will become important that the
        pictures be included. Now I go through the new books and there
        is the added choice of downloading daisy with images. In the
        last book I scanned I was aware there were some pictures, but
        I'm not able to really deal with them because I can't tell how
        over all they are affecting the page lay out. I deleted them
        when I knew one was there. I knew one was there primarily by
        accident if it was at the top of the page as I checked for a
        paragraph mark I would be told a picture was there. I don't
        know if I got them all or if some still remained. The book was
        accepted, but I don't know what the proofer had to do in order
        to make that happened. I may not be expressing myself well,
        but its almost now as if we're creating books that would pass
        in the sighted world with all the same bells and whistles. It
        seems that maybe we're loosing sight of the mission a bit.
        But, again, I guess if the books can be done with all the
        bells and whistles more quickly without us and we still get
        the benefit of the greater numbers, maybe it doesn't matter.
        >> Denise
        >>
        >>
        >> At 10:36 AM 8/27/2009, you wrote:
        >>> If I had a stack of those gay and lesbian books on hand I
        can imagine that I might send them off to Bookshare and I
        might be out the postage and the cost of the books if I had
        bought them, but I would also be out many hours of volunteer
        labor to get them into the collection. I am not particularly
        interested in children's picture books, so I have not
        downloaded any, but I would think that outsourcers could
        handle them. I think that Pavi, in fact, said that the more
        difficult books have priority for being outsourced. The main
        thing I have noticed, though, is that the proportion of books
        added to the collection by means other than volunteers is now
        considerably greater than the proportion added by volunteers
        and that proportion is growing. Also, a good many books
        already in the collection by means of volunteers are being
        replaced by other means. Furthermore, the proportion that are
        being added by volunteers could , in most cases, be done
        faster and just as easily or more easily, by those other
        means. No one has mentioned it. In fact, the Bookshare staff
        is proceeding away with more and more innovations for
        volunteers. What I was really wondering is whether
        volunteering is becoming obsolete and nobody has noticed it.
        >>>
        >>>
        >>> "Can a nation be free if it oppresses other nations? It
        cannot." Vladimir Lenin
        >>>
        >>>              The Militant: http://www.themilitant.com
        <http://wwww.themilitant.com>Pathfinder Press:
        http://www.pathfinderpress.com
        >>> Granma International: http://granma.cu/ingles/index.html
        >>>              _
        >>>
        >>> table with 2 columns and 6 rows
        >>> Subj:Â
        >>> [bksvol-discuss] Re: Are volunteers really that important
        anymore?  Â
        >>> Date:Â
        >>> 8/27/2009 4:25:38 AM Eastern Daylight Time Â
        >>> From:Â
        >>> rwiley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx </mc/compose?to=rwiley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>Â Â
        >>> Reply-to:Â
        >>> bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        </mc/compose?to=bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>Â Â
        >>> To:Â
        >>> bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        </mc/compose?to=bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>Â Â
        >>> Sent from the Internet
        >>> (Details)Â
        >>> table end
        >>>
        >>> Roger, this is an excellent summary of some of the things
        I have also been thinking.Â
        >>>
        >>> When I first started with bookshare a couple of years ago,
        there were tons of books whose rating was fair, and in most
        cases that designation was kind.
        >>> But, the books were available, and for a group starving
        for reading material, they were great to have. Â
        >>>
        >>> However, our tastes--and our tolerances--have improved.
        Where once we would accept day-old bread because we were
        starving, we now want freshly baked goods.
        >>> (Wow, I must be hungry).Â
        >>>
        >>> So, I think your comments about the changing role of the
        volunteer are right on target. There will always be a need for
        volunteers to do the specialty books
        >>> (such as children's books with pictures), and books of
        special interest. I can't imagine NLS having a whole category
        of gay and lesbian books, nor can
        >>> I imagine the department of education wanting their money
        going toward that end. (I'm not being critical, just can't
        imagine it happening.) But, we volunteers
        >>> can make it happen. We can also put books in the
        collection from those publishers who won't cooperate with us
        (after all, we have the law on our side).Â
        >>>
        >>> In short, I see the role of the volunteer changing, but
        not going away any time soon.Â
        >>>
        >>> There's an old Chinese proverb that says "may you live in
        interesting times." I've always wondered whether that was a
        curse, challenge or a blessing. Whatever
        >>> it is, we live in very interesting times with bookshare.Â
        >>>
        >>> BobÂ
        >>>
        >>> “We know the future will outlast all of us, but I
        believe that all of us will live on in the future we make,�
        >>> Senator Edward M. Kennedy
        >>>
        >>> block quote
        >>> ----- Original Message -----
        >>>
        >>> From:
        >>> Rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx </mc/compose?to=Rogerbailey81@xxxxxxx>
        >>>
        >>> To:
        >>> bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
        </mc/compose?to=bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
        >>>
        >>> Sent: Wednesday, August 26, 2009 9:22 PM
        >>>
        >>> Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Are volunteers really that
        important anymore?
        >>>
        >>> I am not taking a position one way or another. I just
        thought I would express some thoughts and questions that have
        been running through my mind. I have
        >>> been involved with Bookshare for just a little over a year
        now and have seen some considerable changes. I have also
        surmised changes that came about before
        >>> I came along. As I understand it the name Bookshare was
        literal in the beginning. That is, people posted the books
        they had scanned for themselves and
        >>> actually shared them with others who were posting books
        they had scanned for themselves. That would have meant that
        the only source of books Bookshare
        >>> had for the most part was from the volunteers. Since then,
        though, publishers have come to contribute large numbers of
        books. Bookshare is acquiring books
        >>> from donations or from buying them and scanning them in
        house or outsourcing them. It actually appears that the number
        of books added to the collection
        >>> by means other than volunteers is considerably greater
        than those added by the volunteers. I have noticed other
        things being done that volunteers do that
        >>> may be being done more prolifically by other means than by
        volunteers. On more than one occasion now I have made a
        quality report for a book that contained
        >>> an error or errors. To my surprise the whole entire book
        was promptly replaced by an outsourcer. That makes me wonder
        why we should bother with scanning
        >>> a BSO. Volunteers are more and more frequently finding
        that the books they intend to scan are being added by
        outsourcers before the volunteer get a chance
        >>> to add it. Yes, that means that the volunteer can work on
        something else, but it still remains that work that would have
        been done by a volunteer is being
        >>> done otherwise. We were asked for some suggestions about
        gaps in the collection and I made a suggestion. As I scan the
        new books lists I see that it appears,
        >>> to my gratification, that my suggestions are being acted
        on. I am pleased, but I cannot help noticing that it is being
        done without volunteers. If time
        >>> is money I wonder if it might be more efficient to donate
        money to Bookshare to buy books and pay outsourcers rather
        than donate our time. If we want certain
        >>> books in the collection I wonder if it might be faster and
        more efficient to just donate the books rather than put so
        much of our own labor into them.
        >>> As things change devices to accomplish our goals become
        obsolete when they are replaced by better devices and certain
        jobs become obsolete when better
        >>> and mor efficient ways are found to do things. I wonder if
        Bookshare volunteering is a job that is becoming obsolete.
        Since we have not even heard hints
        >>> from Bookshare that new volunteers are no longer welcome
        or that volunteers can give up on certain jobs I wonder if
        Bookshare volunteering is becoming
        >>> obsolete and the folks at Bookshare do not even realize it
        yet. It does seem that the volunteers are becoming less
        important to Bookshare and that Bookshare
        >>> could probably now do quite well without volunteers while
        still adding books at a rapid rate. I am not saying that is
        good or bad. I am not saying that
        >>> I want it to be like that or that I don't want it to be
        like that. I am just wondering and thinking. What do you guys
        think about what I have said?Â
        >>> Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Â Â
        Â Â Â  Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â Â Â Â Â Â  Â  "Can a nation
        be free if it oppresses other nations? It cannot." Vladimir
        Lenin   Â
        >>> Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â  The Militant:
        >>> http://www.themilitant.com <http://www.themilitant.com/>
        >>> Pathfinder Press:
        >>> http://www.pathfinderpress.com
        <http://www.pathfinderpress.com/>
        >>> Granma International:
        >>> http://granma.cu/ingles/index.html
        >>> Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â  _
        >>> block quote end
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