[optacon-l] Re: John Linvill's obituary

  • From: Ollie <mallard@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: optacon-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Fri, 11 Mar 2011 20:12:46 +0100

I don't even remember when it Was I first heard about the Optacon, 
but it must have been in the early '70's.
An American pilot, who worked for the same company I was working for 
at the time, told me he had heard about a "miraculous machine" which 
allowed blind people to read normal print.
He even tried to get me one, with the help of some friends of his in 
the States, but he couldn't. I had to wait till March  29th, 1977 to 
finally own an Optacon... It saved my life in more than one sense. 
The day after Elvi, my first guide dog that had been with me for over 
10 years, had to be put to sleep. The thrill of being able to read 
print helped me not to fall into depression...
Elvi had represented my independence in terms of mobility (I was 15 
when she was given to me by the school here in Milan), and the 
Optacon represented my independence in terms of reading for pleasure 
and for work. It allowed me to be taken on by IBM as a ranslator, 
which was unheard of in Italy in those days...
What great memories!
Ciao,
Ollie



At 19:49 11/03/2011, you wrote:
>Thank you.  You articulated my experiences better than I could've.  Glad to
>meet another hopeful visionary.  I thank Robert A. Heinlein for sparking my
>fire when I was in 4th grade and started listening to the few SF talking
>books that started me off on the idea that science could use natural
>analogies like the retina of the eye and the retina of the Optacon camera.
>(grin)
>
>Nick
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Ollie
>Sent: Friday, March 11, 2011 12:41 PM
>To: optacon-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>Subject: [optacon-l] Re: John Linvill's obituary
>
>Hello Jim,
>Thanks for letting us know.
>All my gratitude goes to John and yourself, and all those who worked
>hard so that the Optacon could become a reality.
>I was born blind, but never missed my sight, except for the fact that
>I couldn't read what I wanted when I wanted.
>I collected loads of books and, to those who asked what I was going
>to do with all those books I couldn't read, I replied that I was
>waiting for the day when someone would invent something to allow me to
>read...
>Nobody believed me, but I was sure it would come.
>And it did come...
>So, thanks to all who made this possible.
>Ciao,
>Ollie - a happy Optacon user
>
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