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An alternative information web for visually impaired users in developing countries
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ACM SIGACCESS Conference on Computers and Accessibility archive
Proceedings of the 10th international ACM SIGACCESS conference on Computers and accessibility table of contents
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
POSTER SESSION: Posters and system demonstrations table of contents
Pages 289-290  
Year of Publication: 2008
ISBN:978-1-59593-976-0
Authors
Nitendra Rajput  IBM India Research Lab, New Delhi, India
Sheetal Agarwal  IBM India Research Lab, New Delhi, India
Arun Kumar  IBM India Research Lab, New Delhi, India
Amit Anil Nanavati  IBM India Research Lab, New Delhi, India
Sponsors
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
SIGACCESS: ACM Special Interest Group on Accessible Computing
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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ABSTRACT

Websites in World Wide Web are primarily meant for visual consumption. Moreover, the wide variety of visual controls available make it harder to interpret the websites with screen readers. This problem of accessing information and services on the web escalates even further for visually impaired in developing regions since most are either semi-literate/illiterate or cannot afford computers and high-end phones with screen reading capability.

In this paper, we present an alternate platform -- the World Wide Telecom Web (WWTW). WWTW is already being successfully deployed as a network of VoiceSites that can be created and accessed by a voice interaction over an ordinary phone. WWTW presents a whole new set of opportunities for delivering information and services to the visually impaired. We present a preliminary user study that leads us towards the belief that the Telecom Web can be the mainstream Web for blind users.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

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A. Kumar, N. Rajput, D. Chakraborty, S. Agarwal, and A. A. Nanavati. Voiserv: Creation and delivery of converged services through voice for emerging economies. In WoWMoM'07, Finland, June 2007.
 
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A. Marsha, M. May, and M. Saarelainen. Pharos: coupling GSM and GPS--TALK technologies to provide orientation, navigation and location-based services for the blind. In IEEE EMBS International Conference on Information Technology Applications in Biomedicine, Sep 2000.
 
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Population Reference Bureau. 2006 World Population Data Sheet. Technical Report ISSN 0085-8315, Aug 2006.
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R. Wedgeworth. State of Adult Literacy. Proliteracy Resources, http://www.proliteracy.org, September 2004.
 
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World Health Organisation. Global initiative for the prevention of avoidable blindness. WHO/PBL/97.61, 1997.

Collaborative Colleagues:
Nitendra Rajput: colleagues
Sheetal Agarwal: colleagues
Arun Kumar: colleagues
Amit Anil Nanavati: colleagues