[vip_students] NVDA Remote Access project

  • From: Martin O'Sullivan <martin_osullivan@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: vip_students@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Tue, 24 Mar 2015 16:33:21 +0000 (GMT)

Hi

this seems to be a good project.

you can support it at 
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/nvda-remote-access#homehttps://www.indiegogo.com/projects/nvda-remote-access#home


NVDA Remote Access

Would you pay more than $1,000 to remotely communicate with another computer? 
The blind have to. Please help us change this!

Despite the proliferation of smarter technology in our homes and at our jobs, 
the American Foundation for the Blind reports more than 70% of the blind 
community in the United States is still unemployed. The problem is compounded 
by special software priced well into the thousands to do computer tasks 
everyone else takes for granted. NVDA Remote Access does its part to reverse 
this trend by creating more job opportunities for tech entrepreneurs, system 
administrators, rehabilitation specialists, and educators.
What Is Distance Accessibility?

Blind people use screen readers to access information displayed graphically on 
a computer, tablet or mobile phone. The screen reader employs a variety of 
heuristics to convert the visual information into text that is rendered in 
speech via a synthesizer. NVDA Remote Access builds on the open source screen 
reader NVDA, allowing a blind person to send commands to and hear the speech 
from another user's computer. This provides an ideal tool for real time 
communication between workstations and opens doors for a variety of 
previously-inaccessible job tasks.
Why NVDA Remote Access?

There are two popular screen readers for the Windows environment, NVDA and 
JAWS. NVDA is free software and can be employed anywhere by blind people, their 
educators, their employers and anyone else who needs non-visual access to a 
Windows based PC. JAWS is commercial software that sells for $1,095 per copy, 
placing it well beyond the reach for most individual users and increasing the 
cost of employing or educating a blind person. The irony? The publishers charge 
$200 more to enable the software's remote access feature. Would you pay over a 
thousand dollars to remotely interact with another computer?
The NVDA Remote Access Advantage

NVDA Remote provides a feature set unmatched by its competitors and does so 
totally free for the end user.

Advantages to using NVDA Remote Access include:

    Emphasis on ease of use and thorough documentation for the novice and 
expert user alike
    Compatible with remote desktop connection, VNC, Team viewer, PC over IP, PC 
anywhere, remote assistance, SCCM remote control tool, among other protocols
    Ability to run from a thumb drive, eliminating the need to install a screen 
reader
    Reliant on state-of-the-art encryption for maximum security and privacy.
    Configurable automatic connection to a remote system for any time access to 
a remote computer.
    Connection to a remote PC using a relay server, ensuring functionality 
across different types of networks such as when the end-user cannot open ports
    Free Libre, and Open Source Software (FLOSS)
    Available on GitHub for collaborative expansion of the source code

Exciting Possibilities Created By NVDA Remote Access

NVDA Remote Access will give blind users the freedom to enjoy a number of 
career and educational options. Blind Technical Support Professionals and 
amateurs alike can Use NVDA Remote access to connect to their clients computers 
remotely in real time and walk them through multi-step procedures or teach them 
new applications, techniques and workflows. Educators can hear what their 
students are doing on their computers and vice versa, providing a perfect 
environment for hands-on training from afar. Whether in an office down the hall 
or a datacenter on the other side of the globe, NVDA Remote access will provide 
powerful, minimal latency access to the Windows desktop via speech.
Why You Should Contribute To This Project

Blind people are passionate about moving from beneficiaries to contributors. 
Unfortunately their forward momentum is often inhibited by software that is as 
cost-prohibitive as it is difficult to navigate. NVDA Remote Access is built on 
a platform designed for maximum efficiency with minimal prerequisite training.

The $10,000 funding goal will be invested directly into the research, 
development and maintenance of the product. The software design is specialized 
enough to require experienced software engineers to create and launch the 
software, and while a relatively low cost professional Windows programmer costs 
in excess of $75 per hour, Tyler Spivey and Christopher Toth, owners of 
[GetAccessibleApps] and founding members of [3 Mouse Technology,] agreed to 
make this contribution to the blindness community for a fraction of their 
traditional development cost.

With NVDA Remote Access in hand, blind computer users will capitalize on the 
results of your investment without the undue burden of spending exorbitant 
amounts per copy to perform the same computer tasks sighted colleagues perform 
out of the box. NVDA Remote Access will be another step forward in improving 
employment, educational and lifestyle opportunities for this traditionally 
underserved community.
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