TidBITS#569/26-Feb-01
=====================

  So how do you back up those gargantuan hard disks that are
  standard in today's Macs? Read on this week for Adam's detailed
  look at an attractive new backup device, Ecrix's VXA-1 tape drive.
  Joe Clark's second installment on accessibility for the disabled
  concentrates on the products that are available for the Mac. And
  in the news this week, Apple tweaks the iMac and G4 Cube, releases
  iTunes 1.1, and quietly consigns iReview to the Trash.

Topics:
    MailBITS/26-Feb-01
    Ecrix's VXA-1 Tape Drive: Big Fast Backups
    Accessibility on the Mac: Access Solutions

<http://www.tidbits.com/tb-issues/TidBITS-569.html>
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MailBITS/26-Feb-01
------------------

**New iMacs Highlight Macworld Expo Tokyo** -- At his keynote
  address at the Macworld Expo in Tokyo, Steve Jobs continued
  Apple's move to CD-RW as the media device of choice in new Macs.
  Apple's iMac line still includes Indigo and Graphite models, and
  adds psychedelic Blue Dalmatian and Flower Power designs.
  Available in a basic 400 MHz model ($900, with CD-ROM drive) and
  higher-end 500 MHz and 600 MHz models ($1,200 and $1,500 with
  CD-RW drives), the iMac family is now at the core of Apple's
  "digital lifestyle" push. Interestingly, no iMacs currenty offer
  DVD-ROM drives, though the low-end 450 MHz Power Mac G4 Cube
  ($1,300) retains one, and they're available as build-to-order
  options on Power Mac G4s and G4 Cubes. New G4 Cube models at
  $1,600 and $2,144 (with 128 and 256 MB of memory, respectively,
  compared to 64 MB for the base model) sport CD-RW drives, and the
  high-end unit also packs Nvidia's GeForce2 MX video controller and
  a 60 GB hard disk.

<http://www.apple.com/imac/>
<http://www.apple.com/powermaccube/>
<http://www.nvidia.com/products/geforce2mx.nsf>

  Apple announced a $1,000 price cut in its 22-inch flat-panel
  Cinema Display, now a mere $3,000. Jobs also unveiled Nvidia's
  GeForce3 graphics processing unit (GPU), a high-end chip appearing
  first on the Mac that performs over 800 billion operations per
  second to render 3D objects; it will be available as a $350 build
  to order option on Power Mac G4s in April. Almost lost in the
  shuffle was word that Apple's top-of-the-line 733 MHz Power Mac G4
  minitower, with the CD- and DVD-writing SuperDrive, is now
  shipping. [MHA]

<http://www.apple.com/displays/acd22/>
<http://www.nvidia.com/products.nsf/geforce3_mac.html>
<http://www.apple.com/powermac/>


**iTunes 1.1 Adds Support for Third-Party CD-RW Drives** -- Living
  up to its promise at last month's Macworld Expo in San Francisco,
  Apple has rolled out iTunes 1.1, improving stability, adding
  keyboard controls, and providing support for burning audio CDs
  using more than two dozen third-party CD-RW drives. iTunes enables
  users to burn audio CDs based on playlists of MP3 files (or other
  audio formats supported by iTunes); these audio CDs hold only up
  to the standard 74 minutes of audio, but they can be used in any
  standard audio CD player. Although it's possible to store many
  hours of music in MP3 format on the 650 MB available on a data CD
  and play those in computers or specialized CD-MP3 players, iTunes
  can't create data CDs. For that you'll need to use Apple's Disc
  Burner (for recent Macs with Apple's internal CD-RW) or third-
  party software like Roxio's Toast or CharisMac's Discribe (for all
  other third party CD-R and CD-RW drives). iTunes 1.1 is available
  for free from Apple as a 3.6 MB download; it requires at least Mac
  OS 9.0.4 (Mac OS 9.1 for burning CDs). [GD]

<http://www.apple.com/itunes/>
<http://asu.info.apple.com/swupdates.nsf/artnum/n11901>
<http://www.roxio.com/en/products/toast/>
<http://www.charismac.com/Products/Discribe/>


**I Come to Bury iReview, Not to Praise It** -- Apple has quietly
  turned out the lights on iReview, which it rolled out a little
  over a year ago with iCards and iTools as part of a Mac-centric
  Internet strategy (see "I Say, Apple's iStrategy is iMpressive" in
  TidBITS-512_.) iReview was intended to be a stepping stone for new
  Internet users by providing reviews of Web sites along with user
  feedback and commentary. Unfortunately, iReview seems to have
  fallen into the same trap that doomed other review sites: there
  are simply too many Web sites to review, and the expense of a
  top-notch editorial staff on an effort which brings in no direct
  revenue is hard to justify - especially given the current rounds
  of belt-tightening in high-tech companies like Apple. Folks
  looking for Web site recommendations for children and schools
  might look at Apple's EdView, which many find useful despite it
  being out of date in places and lacking long reviews or user
  feedback. [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=05763>
<http://edview.apple.com/>


**Poll Results: How Would You Like Your TidBITS?** We're
  considering adding options for receiving TidBITS via email, so
  last week we asked how you'd most prefer to receive TidBITS to
  gauge interest in alternative formats. Just over 2,400 readers
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  publishing issues as plain text email messages so long as there's
  interest. We're not yet sure what form additional subscription
  options will take, but we now have a better idea how to focus our
  efforts. Thanks for your input! [GD]

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbpoll=71>
<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tlkthrd=1300+1302>


Ecrix's VXA-1 Tape Drive: Big Fast Backups
------------------------------------------
  by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>

  Huge hard disks are a boon in today's world of MP3s and QuickTime
  movies, but they've made reliable backup strategies harder to
  develop. Back when I bought my first 2.6 GB DAT drive, I'd just
  added my first 1 GB hard disk to my main Mac, and no other Mac on
  my network had over 700 MB online. With Retrospect's intelligent
  snapshot approach to backup and incremental backups, a couple of
  tapes would last for months. Now it takes me 8 DAT tapes just to
  do the first backup, and I can go only about a month before I need
  to recycle a 13-tape backup set. Worse, because of the swapping
  necessary to write and verify 8 tapes, it takes four or five days
  to finish that initial backup, during which time the work I do
  remains largely unprotected.

  So when the folks at Ecrix (pronounced "ecree") offered to send me
  a review unit of their new VXA-1 tape drive, I jumped at the
  chance, although I warned them that a serious review of a backup
  device would take a long time, since the true test of a backup
  device is how it performs under real world conditions. I've now
  been using a VXA-1 tape drive for about eight months, and I think
  I understand it well.

<http://www.ecrix.com/>


**Big and Fast** -- Ecrix makes much of their tape technology and
  how it supposedly makes the special tapes written by the VXA-1
  more reliable and durable than other approaches. Although I've had
  no data loss problems, I can't comment on the super durability,
  since I wasn't about to dip my test tapes in boiling coffee or
  freezing water. What sets the VXA-1 apart in my eyes is that its
  tapes hold a lot of data, and it can read and write at blinding
  speeds.

<http://www.ecrix.com/tour/>
<http://www.ecrix.com/extreme/overview.cfm>

  Ecrix claims that their V17 tapes hold up to 66 GB of data, though
  that's with hardware compression. They also claim a 6 MB per
  second (360 MB per minute) write speed, and that number also takes
  hardware compression into account. It's generally more useful to
  discuss backup devices in terms of native speeds and capacities,
  which would be 33 GB of data and 3 MB per second (180 MB per
  minute), not because you won't do somewhat better with
  compression, but because you'll be happier if the drive exceeds
  your expectations rather than falling short.

  For instance, when I paired the SCSI version of the VXA-1 with an
  Adaptec 29160 SCSI card in my 450 MHz Power Mac G4, Retrospect
  reported write speeds around 250 MB per minute. That's well above
  the 180 MB per minute that you'd see without compression, but far
  below the 360 MB per minute Ecrix claims. Throughout this article,
  I'll use the native speed and capacity, and when comparing the
  VXA-1 with other tape drives, you should make sure to do the same
  for an accurate comparison.

  Based purely on specs, the VXA-1 may sound like a solid backup
  device - big, fast, and reliable. That's essentially my
  conclusion, but I want to focus first on the negatives, since
  although the VXA-1 is very good, it's not perfect, and what I've
  learned may be of use to anyone considering these extremely
  attractive backup devices.


**Speed Caveats** -- You may be salivating at the idea of backing
  up 250 MB per minute, but you won't see speeds like that in most
  situations.

  You must connect the VXA-1 to a fast Mac. I first used it on an
  old Power Mac 7100, but even backups of the local hard disk
  proceeded at only about 30 MB per minute. Plus, I had to order a
  special cable to connect the 68-pin high-density connectors on the
  VXA-1 to the 25-pin SCSI port on the 7100. Even a less expensive
  Adaptec 2930 SCSI card in my Power Mac G4 turned in about 200 MB
  per minute. So if you like to dedicate an older Mac to backup
  tasks, you might want to reconsider that with a VXA-1. (Ecrix has
  recently released a FireWire version of the drive that reportedly
  sports similar performance to the SCSI version in conjunction with
  a fast SCSI card.)

  The VXA-1 itself is seldom the performance bottleneck. If you're
  backing up other machines across a network, performance suffers
  significantly based on the network speed and the speed of the Mac
  being backed up. The faster Macs on our network, my PowerBook G3
  and Tonya's iBook, reach respective speeds of about 55 MB per
  minute (transferring over 10 Mbps wired Ethernet) and 40 MB per
  minute (over our 11 Mbps AirPort wireless network). Our Performa
  6400 manages only about 30 MB per minute over Ethernet, and the
  aged SE/30 hovers around 5 MB per minute. So, although you can't
  blame the VXA-1 for slow network backup performance, it's a fact
  of life you can fix only by increasing the speed of your network
  or the Macs being backed up. And realistically, it's mostly an
  issue on initial backups, since incremental backups copy much less
  data per session.


**Capacity Caveats** -- There are also some caveats when
  considering that 33 GB capacity. First off, Ecrix actually sells
  tapes in three different capacities. The $30 V6 cartridge has a 12
  GB native capacity. The $45 V10 cartridge checks in at 20 GB
  native, and the $80 V17 cartridges that I've been using have the
  longest tape length, so they provide 33 GB native. The 20 GB V10
  is the most economical per gigabyte, by a bit, but I'd happily pay
  a little more for the V17's extra capacity.

<http://www.ecrix.com/products/VXAtape-desc.cfm>

  As I noted before, almost all tape drives claim a 2:1 ratio for
  their hardware compression. The claim is relatively accurate for
  standard types of documents, but many of the largest files we work
  with today (MP3s, QuickTime movies, and JPEG graphics) are already
  internally compressed. No lossless compression routine such as
  those used in backup devices or programs like Aladdin's StuffIt
  Deluxe can achieve a 2:1 compression ratio on such files, and in
  the worst case, the files may even grow slightly.

  But there's yet another problem that can suck capacity from your
  backup tapes. For optimal use of space with any tape drive, you
  never want the drive to wait for data from the computer. Most tape
  drives write "pad blocks" while waiting since it's faster for a
  drive to write pad blocks rather than stop, rewind, reposition,
  spin back up to speed, and start writing again. The VXA-1 is
  different: it does stop the tape motion while waiting for data,
  but it must still write a "splice point" between the old and new
  data, and the accumulation of many splice points reduces capacity.
  So if you're using a slow Mac or backing up over a network, you're
  likely wasting some space.

  I ran into a combination of these two issues in spades. Since most
  of my backups run over 10 Mbps Ethernet, they're not very speedy,
  and until I moved the VXA-1 from the Power Mac 7100 to my Power
  Mac G4, nothing was backing up at much over 25 MB per minute.
  Worse, about 9 GB of the files on our Performa 6400 file server
  are MP3s. Needless to say, I was unwittingly wasting considerable
  tape space and was miffed when my tapes only held about 29 GB. It
  wasn't until Ecrix's tech support explained things that I realized
  how badly I'd been using the VXA-1.

  I've come up with two solutions. First, I'm going to stop backing
  up my MP3s to tape and instead burn them to CD-R, which will
  provide some level of backup and let me play MP3s in a Philips
  CD-MP3 player a friend gave us for Christmas. Second, you can use
  an Ecrix program called VXATool to change some of the
  configuration settings within the VXA-1. One of these options sets
  the drive to favor capacity over speed (supposedly making a V17
  tape hold its full 33 GB versus only 20 GB when speed is favored),
  and I've just switched to that mode. It reduced the speed of an
  initial backup of my Power Mac G4's hard disk from 250 MB per
  minute down to 135 MB per minute, but the throughput of subsequent
  incremental backups and for all my network volumes was unaffected.
  I haven't been using it long enough to determine how much more
  data I'll really get on each tape. Unfortunately, VXATool is a
  primitive command-line program; the command to favor capacity is
  "1 capacity y".


**Other Considerations** -- I was initially quite negative about
  moving the VXA-1 from the 7100 in the server room to the G4 at my
  desk because I like having Retrospect's backup server scripts
  running constantly and I don't like listening to unnecessary fans.
  Retrospect turned out not to be a problem, since it politely
  launches itself every night at 11 PM (thanks to the Retro.Startup
  extension), backs up everything on the network, and doesn't
  complain when I quit it in the morning after a glance to verify
  the backups completed successfully. More important, the VXA-1's
  fan, although relatively loud, turns on only when necessary, so
  it's mostly silent.

  The physical design of the VXA-1 is quite large, though reasonably
  attractive, and it can sit on either its bottom or on its side.
  Four front panel lights flash in a variety of ways and colors to
  communicate numerous bits of feedback. Unfortunately, the key to
  what those lights mean exists only in Ecrix's PDF-based
  documentation (even though they include a printed Getting Started
  card).

  I've had to interpret the feedback lights twice. The first time it
  informed me that I needed to clean the drive with the special $35
  cleaning tape. The second was more serious - the first unit I
  received, an early production model, stopped working and announced
  its troubles via the feedback lights. I tried to troubleshoot it
  with the aid of Ecrix's tech support, and when updating its
  firmware didn't solve the problem, they promptly replaced it with
  a current model that's worked well since, with one exception.

  At that point, I was still using the Power Mac 7100, and something
  caused it to crash while writing to tape. Sophisticated Circuits'
  Rebound restarted the Mac, but the VXA-1 remained confused (other
  crashes haven't bothered it at all) and claimed it was continuing
  to write to the tape. I couldn't stop it or even eject the tape.
  Ecrix explained that in such a situation, the VXA-1 tries to write
  the directory of what has been stored on the tape, and it can
  remember that it wants to do so even if you power it off and back
  on again. Something prevented it from completing that write, so
  Ecrix's tech support rep told me the secret trick for ejecting a
  tape in such a situation: hold down the front-mounted eject button
  for 10 to 15 seconds and the VXA-1 will cough it up. Needless to
  say, you'll want to erase that tape and start a new backup on it,
  since its data is not likely to be in a good state.


**Buying Advice** -- Despite these warts, I'm actually more
  comfortable recommending the VXA-1 now that I've lived with it for
  the last eight months. Ecrix's tech support has not only been able
  to help resolve my problems, they've explained _why_ they've
  occurred. To me, knowledge of how and why my systems work is
  important because I'm relying on this drive to act predictably in
  unpredictable situations.

  The cost per gigabyte of the VXA-1's tapes is extremely good, but
  the drive itself isn't as cheap for use on home networks or small
  offices. Prices range from about $1,000 up to $1,500, depending on
  whether you want an internal or external drive, FireWire or SCSI,
  and with or without Retrospect Desktop or Retrospect Server.
  However, even as Ecrix provides various stripped-down options,
  they don't skimp - even the most minimal package includes a $35
  cleaning tape and an $80 V17 tape. Plus, you can get any package
  to test for free for 30 days.

<http://store.ecrix.com/cgi-bin/Ecrix.storefront/1704575581/Catalog/1020>

  For home and small office use, OnStream's 25 GB and 15 GB (native
  capacities) Echo tape drives, which come in USB, FireWire, and
  SCSI versions, would seem to compete favorably with the VXA-1.
  Drive costs are significantly lower than the VXA-1 drives,
  particularly for the slow 15 GB USB drives, but the tape
  capacities are also lower, the performance is slower, and the cost
  per gigabyte for the 15 GB tapes is higher than the VXA-1's 33 GB
  tapes. I can't speak to the OnStream drives' overall reliability
  or usability.

<http://www.onstream.com/>

  Plus, if you're anticipating future growth, Ecrix offers the VXA
  AutoPak, a 15 tape loader combined with either one or two VXA-1
  drives. It's pricey, but not for what you get, and lets you start
  small and move up without changing media types.

<http://www.ecrix.com/products/VXA-autopak-desc.cfm>

  One slight concern about both the Ecrix and OnStream drives is
  that neither is yet an industry standard with multiple suppliers
  for media and mechanisms. That's a concern if you think that
  either company might go under, orphaning users who would need new
  media or replacement mechanisms to recover backed-up data. Since
  neither technology has reached the status of industry standard,
  they're equally vulnerable, and anyone who is truly concerned
  should either look elsewhere or make contingency plans.

  In the end, I'm not only happy with the VXA-1 drive, I'm extremely
  pleased with how it has compared to my old, slow DAT drive and its
  teetering stacks of tapes. If your backup strategy is suffering
  from too-old hardware, take advantage of the 30-day free trial of
  the VXA-1 and see if it solves your problems as handily as it
  solved mine.


Accessibility on the Mac: Access Solutions
------------------------------------------
  by Joe Clark <joeclark@joeclark.org>

  Last week, I talked about the needs of people with visual,
  hearing, or mobility impairments when it comes to using a Mac. In
  a nutshell, the state of accessibility on the Macintosh is in
  decline and may become worse under Mac OS X before it gets better.
  Meanwhile, most people with disabilities are currently better
  served with Windows-based machines than Macs. (See "Accessibility
  on the Mac: Trouble in Paradise" in TidBITS-568_.)

<http://db.tidbits.com/getbits.acgi?tbart=06311>


**The Good News** -- First off, all the usual advantages Macs
  enjoy over Windows - consistent, integrated user interface; easy
  networking; simplicity in installing and removing applications and
  system enhancements; and visual elegance - remain notable
  advantages for many disabled users. And there are some clear-cut
  superlatives, like built-in speech output (and speech recognition,
  however limited).

  If you need to get a disabled coworker, employee, or friend or
  relative up and running on a Mac, it's usually possible. Your
  options are more limited than with Windows, but for nearly all
  relevant disabilities, there's at least something available to
  reduce or eliminate barriers.

  Whether you're looking for Mac or Windows products, your first
  stop for information should be the long-standing magazine and Web
  site Closing the Gap, which offers a large searchable resource
  directory.

<http://www.closingthegap.com/rd/>


**Mobility Impairment** -- If you need help typing or using the
  mouse (for example, if you suffer from repetitive strain injury or
  have multiple sclerosis), you can use Apple's own accessibility
  software, which you might have to load onto your Mac via a custom
  install from a Mac OS CD-ROM. You can also download the files
  directly from Apple.

<http://www.apple.com/education/k12/disability/easyaccess.html>

  Sticky Keys and Mouse Keys are the most useful utilities in the
  package. With Sticky Keys, you can press modifier keys and letter
  or number keys in sequence instead of together: Command then Shift
  then Q, for example. Maddeningly, though, Sticky Keys turns itself
  off if you actually do manage to press a modifier and another key
  simultaneously (Command-Z, for example, since they're usually
  close together), thereby making you more disabled than you
  actually are. Mouse Keys lets you move the mouse by pressing keys
  on the numeric keypad. (There's a related utility, Mouse Keys for
  PowerBooks, for machines without numeric keypads.) However, those
  Apple utilities were always minimal and haven't been significantly
  improved in half a decade.

  Third-party products might be a better option. Tash, Inc.'s $100
  SwitchClick is a big, squat cylinder that substitutes for a mouse.
  You can use it with the $275 MouseMover software to control mouse
  functions like click, press and hold, or simply moving the mouse
  in a given direction.

<http://tashinc.com/catalog/ca_switch_click.html>
<http://tashinc.com/catalog/ca_mouse_mover.html>

  From RJ Cooper comes the $100 SmartClick, software that
  substitutes for a mouse using a technique called "dwell
  selection:" you hover the mouse cursor on an object and make a
  selection with SmartClick's on-screen menus, which is then
  interpreted as the click, double-click, click-and-drag or similar
  action of a mouse. To make this function work, you need either a
  mouse or a trackball, a mouse substitute like Tash's SwitchClick
  or, even better, a HeadMouse from Origin Systems ($1,890 with USB
  cable).

<http://rjcooper.com/smartclick/>
<http://www.orin.com/access/headmouse/>

  With the HeadMouse, you wear a tiny self-adhesive silver dot on
  your forehead. The HeadMouse hardware, which sits atop your
  monitor or CPU, sends out twin infrared beams and triangulates the
  position of the dot on your forehead. Movements of the HeadMouse
  substitute for the movements of a regular mouse. Putting the
  HeadMouse and SmartClick together, even a quadriplegic can
  manipulate the mouse cursor purely through head movements and
  execute all the usual mouse actions.

  For typing, someone with a moderate mobility impairment can use a
  customized hardware keyboard like the $780 Discover:Kenx
  (pronounced "Connects") by Don Johnston, Inc. It's a combination
  keyboard and mouse. If you need a very large keyboard, Don
  Johnston offers the $500 Discover:Board.

<http://www.donjohnston.com/catalog/disked.htm>
<http://www.donjohnston.com/catalog/disbrdd.htm>

  You can also use an onscreen keyboard - conceptually similar to
  Apple's Key Caps desk accessory - along with adaptive hardware,
  such as the $100 OnScreen by RJ Cooper.

<http://rjcooper.com/onscreen/>


**Hearing Impairment** -- The access requirements of deaf and
  hard-of-hearing people are quite modest given that, even in an age
  of Napster, computers are largely silent devices that communicate
  visually. In fact, computers as they stand now themselves provide
  a form of communications accessibility, since email and instant
  messaging don't require hearing at all.

<http://www.wired.com/news/print/0,1294,33736,00.html>

  There are a few places where audio is important. For instance,
  beep sounds on the Mac can be converted to menubar flashes by
  turning the alert sound volume to zero in the Sound control panel.

  Forms of multimedia remain a perennial obstacle, and since
  multimedia now is making increasing inroads into the Internet,
  we'll wait until a later article to explore the problems and
  solutions there.


**Visual Impairment** -- Of the disabilities affected by computer
  use, visual impairment is the most significant. As we have seen
  with devices varying as widely as the Palm and a range of tablet
  computers, Internet refrigerators and whatnot, in real-world use a
  computer is mostly a display. If you can't see a display, how do
  you use a computer?

  If you have a relatively modest visual impairment, all you may
  need is screen magnification. The free Apple utility CloseView
  provides bare-bones magnification, but you get what you pay for.
  Instead, opt for the $295 InLarge by Alva Access Group, the only
  screen magnifier of note for Macs. It features 16 magnification
  levels, three settings for controlling how the magnified portion
  of the screen moves, the capability to display only the area being
  magnified, and other options.

<http://www.aagi.com/aagi/inlarge.asp>

  Many visually-impaired people find dark text on a brilliant white
  background unbearable. A very few applications - Web browsers,
  WordPerfect, Eudora - let you select the foreground and background
  colours, while the near-ubiquitous Microsoft Word limits you to
  black-on-white or white-on-blue. The Window Monkey utility lets
  you assign background colours and patterns to Finder windows.

<http://www.tigertech.com/monkey.html>

  If you're blind enough that you can't really see a monitor, you
  need something called a screen reader - a program that reads aloud
  on-screen text, menus, icons, and the like. Unfortunately, there's
  only one screen reader for Macintosh, Alva Access Group's $700
  OutSpoken 9.

<http://www.aagi.com/aagi/outspoken_products.asp>

  Screen-reader technology is advanced and competitive on Windows,
  and the three big-name programs there - Jaws, Window-Eyes, and IBM
  Home Page Reader - are all able to interpret Web sites (more or
  less accurately) and also interpret the tricks and features of
  standard application software.

<http://www.hj.com/JAWS/JAWS.html>
<http://www.gwmicro.com/windoweyes/>
<http://www-3.ibm.com/able/hpr.html>

  In contrast, the somewhat outdated OutSpoken for Macintosh does
  not interpret HTML. According to Lou Grosso of Alva Access Group,
  OutSpoken 9 "will simply read from left to right the text that is
  on the screen. Web and HTML access will improve tremendously in
  OutSpoken X which should be released in late 2001." Moreover, Alva
  Access Group strongly cautions you not to use OutSpoken with
  Microsoft software. Of course, there are other software
  alternatives to Microsoft's products, but using them limits one's
  capability to work on documents in collaborative environments. In
  the real world, it is regrettably true that anyone who requires a
  screen reader is better off using Windows, and nearly all blind
  people do.

<http://www.aagi.com/aagi/faq_osm9_applic.html#1>

  OutSpoken remains the only full-featured Mac screen reader
  comparable to what's available for Windows, but RJ Cooper offers
  the $95 KeyRead, a kind of mini-screen reader for blind kids $95.
  In addition, an old Apple utility that dates back to the AV Macs
  is still available online, in samizdat form. HearIt lets you
  select nearly any text in nearly any application and listen to it
  using Macintosh speech output.

<http://rjcooper.com/keyread/>
<http://www.ldresources.com/tools/shareware.html>

  On the Mac platform, people with disabilities have relatively few
  options when it comes to adaptive technology. There are more
  barriers to using a Mac than there need to be. Nonetheless,
  disabled Mac aficionados haven't been completely left out in the
  cold. Here's hoping Apple will acknowledge the strategic (and,
  increasingly, the legal) importance of actively supporting
  accessibility in all its forms, improving its own hardware and
  software and encouraging developers to close the technology gap
  between the Mac OS and Windows.

  [Joe Clark is a former journalist in Toronto who's followed,
  written about, and worked in the disability field for two decades.
  Explore his many online accessibility resources at his Web site.]

<http://joeclark.org/access/>



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