Maximum Accessibility: Making Your Web Site More Usable for Everyone
by Ph.D. John M. Slatin, Sharron Rush
A Word about Screen Readers
To access the Web, we used a PC running Microsoft Windows 98 and Internet Explorer 5.5 together with a screen reader called JAWS for Windows (version 3.70.87, the most recent version available when we started working on this manuscript in July 2001; later we upgraded to JAWS 4.0 and then 4.01 as these new versions became available). Other popular screen readers include Window-Eyes, HAL, and out-SPOKEN, by GW-Micro, Dolphin, and Alva AG, respectively.
Like other screen readers, JAWS is “transparent” to most applications: it converts material on the computer screen to synthetic speech and reads it aloud, going from left to right and top to bottom. When reading Web content, screen readers and talking browsers (such as ...
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