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DAISY XML Enables
Print-Disabled Individuals
May 7, 2008
Microsoft with industry
and advocacy group leaders worldwide to launch new software that will
make it easier for anyone to create documents and content that will be
accessible for blind and print-disabled individuals. The new “Save as
DAISY XML” add-in, designed for Microsoft Office Word 2007, Word 2003
and Word XP, will allow users to save Open XML-based text files into
DAISY XML
The “Save as DAISY XML” add-in was created through an open source
project with Microsoft, Sonata Software Ltd. and the Digital Accessible
Information SYstem (DAISY) Consortium and can be downloaded by Microsoft
Office Word users for free at
http://www.openxmlcommunity.org/daisy.
Also released today is the newest version of the DAISY Pipeline, a free
downloadable transformation suite that supports the seamless conversion
of DAISY XML into DAISY Digital Talking Book (DTB) format. Together
these technologies provide a comprehensive solution for converting text
documents into accessible formats for people with print disabilities.
Groups such as the World Health Organization and the World Blind Union
estimate that more than 160 million people throughout the world are
either blind or have a significant impairment to their vision. This
number does not even begin to address the additional hundreds of
millions of people with physical, developmental, or learning
disabilities who can benefit from the rich applications of DAISY.
Global access to the “Save as DAISY XML” add-in for Microsoft Office
Word is an important step forward for people with print disabilities
around the world, including those in developing countries, because it
will support access to information contained within billions of
Microsoft Office Word documents, helping them to lead more independent
and productive lives.
“This new ‘Save as DAISY XML’ functionality for Microsoft Word has the
potential to break down barriers for millions of visually impaired
individuals around the world and enhance the experience for virtually
anyone who loves to read,” said Chris Capossela, senior vice president
of the Information Worker Product Management Group at Microsoft. “We are
proud of our collaboration with the DAISY Consortium and Sonata Software
to deliver valuable benefits for people with a visual impairment. This
tool will make it easier for anyone — from a child writing to his or her
grandparent, to a government agency providing vital information to its
citizens — to create accessible content.”
“Microsoft’s initiative to put ‘Save as DAISY XML’ in Microsoft Word is
the first step to bring fully accessible content to people who are blind
or who have a print disability. We know that much of the information in
documents today is created with Microsoft Word; this new add-in provides
an unprecedented leap forward in the worldwide effort to make
information available to all,” said George Kerscher, secretary general
of the DAISY Consortium.
“As an advocate of technologies that help blind and low-vision
individuals, and as chair of an organization managing a digital library
based on DAISY XML formats, I can attest that this ‘Save as DAISY XML’
plug-in for Microsoft Office Word is a landmark development,” said
Dominique Burger of BrailleNet. “The ability to generate DAISY XML
content from within an application used by millions of people around the
world is welcome news for all who have been pushing for such a
broad-reaching solution.”
This new tool also presents the opportunity for organizations and
independent software vendors to consider ways in which the technology
may be employed to meet the needs of those not yet served by text-only
or audio-only formats. Corporations such as insurance agencies,
healthcare providers and companies that publish training manuals require
a method to deliver fully accessible documents to their customers and
employees with different needs. For these organizations, the “Save as
DAISY XML” add-in is the breakthrough they have been waiting for.
“Because it’s part of a familiar tool, this plug-in for Microsoft Office
Word significantly reduces the friction for content creators in
producing accessible digital material,” said Andrew Savikas, director of
publishing technology at O’Reilly Media Inc. “Support for DAISY, along
with the emerging ePub standard, is an easy way for software makers to
build accessibility into their products, and I hope to see others follow
suit.”
“Technologies that address the specific challenges that universities and
public institutions face in providing books and publications for those
who cannot read standard print are in great demand,” said Sam Ogami,
assistive technology expert for the California State University Office
of the Chancellor. “Functionality like the new ‘Save as DAISY XML’
feature within Microsoft Office Word could greatly streamline the
production — and reduce the expense — of delivering powerful and
accessible content to those who need it.”
“Libraries today are often ill-equipped to provide content for people
with print disabilities, and the methods they have at their disposal are
antiquated,” said Helen Brazier, a member of the International
Federation of Library Associations (IFLA). “But things are beginning to
change, and state-of-the-art technology like the ‘Save as DAISY XML’
add-in and the new DAISY Pipeline are making it easy and cost-effective
for libraries to essentially level the information playing field for
people with disabilities and do things they never before could have
imagined.” |