Accessibility

New OpenOffice.org Writer Extension Produces Braille

Leuven, Belgium, 4 August 2010 - The Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (K.U.Leuven) today released an extension for OpenOffice.org Writer that enables users to save documents as Braille or to send them directly to a Braille embosser. "odt2braille" (http://odt2braille.sourceforge.net/) is a freeware extension for OpenOffice.org, a office suite that is freely available for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux/Unix and Solaris.

Due to the emergence of technologies such as audio books and synthetic speech on PCs in the last few decades the proportion of blind persons who know Braille has decreased. Some people consider Braille as an arcane system that will become marginalised or replaced by audio books and synthetic speech. Nevertheless, Braille is still important: it is not only a reading system but also a writing system, and its defenders maintain that teaching Braille to blind children is important for the development of functional literacy. Braille is also indispensable for persons who are deaf-blind.

odt2braille is available for Microsoft Windows (XP, Vista and Windows 7), and will later also become available for Mac OS X and Linux/Unix. The current version of odt2braille supports eight Braille embossers, and additional embossers will be added later. One of the supported embossers is the Elekul, which was developed at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven by Prof. Dr. Guido Franรงois, and which was the first system that could emboss Braille on both sides of the same sheet of paper.

odt2braille is being developed in the context of the ร†GIS project, a research & development project supported by the European Commission. The ร†GIS project develops software for persons with disabilities, covering the desktop platform, the Web ("Rich Internet Applications", i.e. web-based applications that provide user interfaces and functionality that were formerly only available on the desktop) and mobile devices. In November 2009, the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven released another OpenOffice.org extension in the context of the ร†GIS project: odt2daisy (http://odt2braille.sourceforge.net/), an OpenOffice.org Writer extension that converts text documents to audio books in the DAISY format.

Downloading and Using odt2braille

odt2braille can be downloaded from http://odt2braille.sourceforge.net/. This website also contains installation instructions and a manual.

odt2braille is suited to both Braille experts and occasional Braille users. In addition to converting text documents to Braille, it also allows users to directly input Braille in a document. In other words, users can determine which specific Braille codes should be transferred to paper. The keys S, D, F, J, K and L can be used to simulate the keys on a Braille keyboard.

More importantly, text documents can be converted to Braille automatically. This type of conversion can also be done with other โ€” typically commercial โ€” applications, but odt2braille has important advantages:

Firstly, the whole process runs in a single environment, i.e. OpenOffice.org:

Secondly, all data are saved in a single file: Consequently, there are no separate versions but a single document, which avoids synchronisation issues between several versions of the same document.

The new functionality is available through the "Braille" menu, which is added to OpenOffice.org Writer when odt2braille is installed.

The Braille conversion is an intuitive process and the output can be tailored by the user. Users with little or no Braille experience can rely on the existing Braille conventions. In this case the Braille conversion requires very little user interaction. odt2braille is also suited to experienced Braille users who prefer to use their own formatting conventions.

The list of supported Braille embossers is still limited and consists of certain models by Interpoint NV (i.e. Elekul), Index Braille and Braillo Norway AS.

It is also possible to export documents to computer files that can be read by other Braille software. In this way, Braille conversion and embossing can be separated in time, and the user can still modify the Braille document before sending it to the embosser.

Source: http://odt2braille.sourceforge.net/index.html

Mail from: AEGIS project team

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When: 7/2/2014

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