[optacon-l] Re: The Optacon User List Activities

  • From: "Mark Blier" <mblier@xxxxxxx>
  • To: <optacon-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 7 Jan 2009 02:35:04 -0700

Hello, Catherine,
Please -- please -- watch your typos.

Thanks.

Mark Blier

                    ----------


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Catherine Thomas 
  To: optacon-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Wednesday, January 07, 2009 2:11 AM
  Subject: [optacon-l] The Optacon User List Activities


  Hi, Everyone,
  Judy and the other new members of the Optacon User list might be pleased 
  to know that the Optacon is still very much alive and well. Beginning in 
  April of 2006 the Optacon User list launched its own Optacon preservation 
  project. These are the things which we have accomplished so far. If I 
  leave out anything I hope other members will fill in the gaps.

  We Optacon users launched a campaign to let everyone know that Optacons 
  could still be repaired. There are authorized repairers in the U.S., 
  England, Canada, and Australia. We also asked for dead or non-working 
  Optacons which we called corpses to be used for parts or, if possible to 
  be repaired and returned to the hands of active users. As a result of our 
  efforts quite a few people who thought they would never use Optacon again 
  have been reunited with their machines or with new, actually 
  re-conditioned machines, both Optacon r series and Optacon II's.

  Oehm Electronics in San Jose California, one of our authorized repairers, 
  fabricated a new retina calbe which can be substituted for those cables 
  badly broken or damaged.

  The Optacon Users prepared a survey which was revised to add a couple of 
  extra questions. The object was to find out just what current Optacon 
  users were doing with their Optacons. The five most common uses of the 
  Optacon are: reading mail, signing checks and other legal correspondence, 
  verification that labels and other printed material had lined up 
  correctly, reading of private documents, and used in conjunction with a 
  scanner to determine what and where to scan. There are other common uses 
  but these recurred the most in the surveys. We have close to 200 surveys 
  at this time. We are expecting more.

  We also wanted to isolate those uses of the Optacon that are uniques and 
  have never been replicated by any other device. Among the unique uses that 
  have been described in detail by list members or takers of our survey are: 
  reading of print music; reading documents that are written in more than 
  one language, reading the surfaces of appliances to find out which buttons 
  do what; reading schematics and diagrams; using fat books such as phone 
  books or dictionaries or large computer manuals; reading bottles, cans, 
  jars, prescription information; Etc.

  Some of our members have placed articles in various braille magazines to 
  let people know that Optacons can still be repaired and that we are also 
  looking for them. Each time an article has appeared, we have gotten a 
  burst of emails.

  Two of our list members have worked hard to supply as much of the original 
  Optacon documentation as possible electronically. If anyone needs the 
  manuals for any of the Optacon units or for the CRT lens they have only to 
  ask. Also, on the Freedom Scientific web site, apparently the current 
  owners of the TeleSensory rights, one of our list members arranged for the 
  original training manual to be placed there as a .pdf file. We explain to 
  anyone interested that this document is meant to be printed out before 
  use.

  In addition to all of this, we are working to possibly re-develop the 
  Optacon at a future time. There have been several efforts made in this 
  direction but most of them have been glorified scanners. The object of any 
  device developed by our users would be a device that retains the Optacon's 
  biggest advantage which is the ability to see uninterpreted print in real 
  time. Two examples for instance are the ability of the Optacon to know 
  that information did in fact fit on a label and did not accidentally land 
  partially on another label or, the ability of the Optacon to show what 
  sort of margins a document has. This can be very handy if pages need to be 
  photocopied.

  We have the talent right here on this list to design a new Optacon that 
  might be able to read let's say the displays on CD and DVD players or the 
  menus on cell phones or TV screens. We are in search of certain schematics 
  and some source code which is among the missing. Those on our list who are 
  engineers woule really love to have these things, particularly those 
  relating to the software which turned the Optacon II into a screen-reader.

  Ww have accomplished these things without spending a dime. That in itself 
  is praiseworthy. Eventually of course, to develop a new Optacon, even a 
  prototype, we will need money. For now we continue to collect data which 
  will support our search for funds when the time comes. One of the 
  interesting issues whcih keeps coming up is the mention by people who are 
  not Optacon users that they wish they had been.

  We do have several list members who are new Optacon users. Every so often 
  they let us know how they are doing. Many on the list have been more than 
  willing to partner with a new user to help get them started.

  If any list member wants to read some of the itneresting stories posted to 
  this list over the years, visit the list archives. Perhaps someone can 
  once again post the address of the archives. I never have it when I need 
  it.

  In summary, the Optacon is alive and well. Currently, due to donated 
  units, our repairers have enough Optacons for anybody who wants one. 
  However, our search goes on for more broken units or stashes of parts. So, 
  once again we urge all list members to dig trough those agency closets and 
  storerooms and to speak to anyone you ever knew who used an Optacon or 
  might have had a friend who did.

  Our list moderator can confirm this for sure but I believe that since we 
  began our initiative in 2006 the Optacon list membership must have 
  doubled.

  Optacon lenses and accessories have also been bought and sold on this 
  list. If anyone has a CRT lens, typewriter lens, calculator lens, small 
  print lens, etc. that they no longer use, someboedy else will be 
  delighted.

  Lastly, we also have complied a few tip sheets to help Optacon users. 
  These are composed of suggestions that users have made on how to perform 
  certain tasks. We have a tip sheet on signing documents, and another on 
  using the Optacon to help with scanning. We also have a wish list which 
  mentions many of the fetaures that we might like in a new Optacon. If 
  anyone would like any of these or a copy of the survey, please write to me 
  privately.

  Speaking of surveys, we also tried to find out how people who don't use 
  Optacons manage certain tasks. We didn't pursue this very far but the 
  replies we got to the urvey we created were very enlightening.

  There is most definitely still a need for an Optacon. We have met with 
  great success in our efferts to preserve it and, we hope with the aid of 
  our group of engineers and instructors and trainers as well as our users 
  to develop a device that will be very useful to the next generation.

  Please feel free to add anything I left out.

  Catherine


  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  -Catherine Thomas
  braille@xxxxxxxxx                     /

  
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