2010-03-12

[personal profile] newsflash2010-03-12 10:37 am
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Mt. Holyoke College fails

My best friend has a lot wrong with her. She's a juvenile diabetic. She's got a disease called Ehlers-Danlos syndrome (EDS) that makes mobility an issue. She uses a service dog for stability and balance and to pick up things she otherwise would be unable to, among other uses.

Understandably, it's hard to complete formal education with all of this going on, which is why she hasn't finished her undergraduate degree. So imagine her elation when she was accepted to Mount Holyoke College under their program for non-traditional students. She was part of a group of older students whose educations had been interrupted for whatever reasons--health, children, poverty, career.

To make a long, painful story very short, she's had a shocking, nightmarish experience at Mount Holyoke, which you would expect to be a liberal, supportive environment since it's a women's college. She was led to believe everything would be in place for her arrival and that disability services there were top notch. However, it's been a nightmare. She was unable to eat in the cafeteria the first two months of school because the student workers told her she couldn't bring a dog in. Disability services told her they weren't sure what they could do, because not all student workers might understand an email saying they couldn't refuse her service. She was given a room on a third floor that her scooter wouldn't fit in, and when she complained she was told to leave her expensive piece of medical equipment in the lobby. When they finally moved her to a new dorm room, she had to go across campus to shower in her old dorm because they didn't install grab bars in her shower. She wasn't given accommodations letters for her professors for months. Etc. She learned her experience wasn't isolated, and after months of pain and frustration last semester, she and a large group of disabled students met with the dean of the college, with very unsatisfactory results.

My friend blogs about it here.
jadelennox: Oracle, with her headset, looking shocked (oracle: headset look)
[personal profile] jadelennox2010-03-12 10:59 am

dictation software. Mostly.

Dragon NaturallySpeaking very helpfully has the command "shut down the computer", which cleanly closes out of NaturallySpeaking, save your user files, waits until NaturallySpeaking has exited, and then shuts the computer down.

Except.

Periodically, NaturallySpeaking wants to ask you a question during shutdown. Like "would you like to allocate more space to the Acoustic Optimizer?" Something like that. And every time, it turns off the microphone FIRST. It doesn't ask you the question until it has already disabled the microphone. Which means every time it does that, I need to plug in my keyboard and answer the question manually.

This isn't the only way in which NaturallySpeaking forgets that some of the people using the software are using it hands-free entirely. When you run an upgrade, for example, it has to do a certain amount of data gathering: asking the user questions about the system. But instead of doing that BEFORE it disables the old version, it first makes you quit out of the old version and then starts asking question about serial number and installation location. Yes, I understand that using the standard ordering provided by InstallShield (or whatever software package they are using) is easier than doing something non-standard. But Nuance, think about your users. We are using our computers with our voices. If you can change the order of prompts just a tiny bit so that the microphone is ON when you ask us questions, do you realize what a difference that would make our lives?

(Answer: no. The NaturallySpeaking developers who turn up on forms and bulletin boards make it clear that they think nobody is using the product hands-free. There are features I use hands-free which the documentation specifically says can't be used that way.)