Sunday, March 25, 2012

Chatter On


Balabolka means “Chatter” in Russian. Balabolka delivers by making your computer a real conversation piece by adding text to speech to your arsenal of “reading” and learning programs.



Developed by several Russian programmers, Balabolka is a free download. This is a Windows only program. Sorry MAC and LINUX. It is also available in a portable version.

Balabolka will open AZW, CHM, DjVu, DOC, EPUB, FB2, HTML, MOBI, ODT, PRC, PDF and RTF files, If you don't recognize all of those, the most common ones you'll use will be the DOC (and DOCX), MOBI, EPUB, PDF. RTF and possibly HTML files. AWZ files are formatted for the Kindle and often have Digital Rights Management (DRM) preventing them from being read by open programs or without some type of id. CHM files are the help files for programs stored in a compressed format. ODT is the Open Document format which almost all word processing programs can open.

One of the big features of Balabolka is the text to speech feature. Opening one of the file types above, you can have the text read back to you. The program uses the Speech Application Program Interface (part of Microsoft Windows) to talk to you. Specific text can be selected or the entire file can be read. As well as reading the text aloud, the program will track (or block) it to add a visual element to the reading. This can sometimes increase comperehension for persons with learning disabilities.

The other distinctive feature is the ability to save the text as an audio file. It can be saved as a WAV, MP3, MP4, OGG or WMA file Unless you're familiar with the other formats, most of your audio files will be saved as MP3 files and then transferred to your MP3 player.

Read On or in the case of Balabolka, LISTEN ON!

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Low Vision and Computers


How many times have those of us with less than perfect vision (even corrected) had to put our face almost on the screen to read some small print or worse a horrible font and background color combination?

Too many.

There are several solutions that you can use.

One – the built in Windows magnifier. Not perfect but when all else fails, it helps. Information can be found here: http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-xp/help/turn-on-magnifier

Two – Using Firefox as a web browser, the keyboard shortcut CTRL + “+” will enlarge the font (CTRL + “-” will reduce). If a page is not setup correctly, then you'll get some funky duplication, but for most pages and text, it enlarges very well. http://kb.mozillazine.org/Accessibility_features_of_Firefox#Resizing_page_text

Three – Using Internet Explorer same basic technique as in Firefox http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-vista/Zoom-in-on-a-webpage

Four – a simple screen enlarger program name DeskTop Zoom, which does not need administrative privileges to install or use. It can also be used from a flash drive as a portable program. Download the program from here http://users.telenet.be/littlegems/MySoft/DesktopZoom/Index.html

Other tips and tricks to come in later posts