Free Resources from the Net for EVERY Learner

Supporting Universal Access and Universal Design for Learning

June 23, 2011
by Paul Hamilton
1 Comment

Google Chrome Hears Me with ‘Voice Search’

Search Outloud with Voice SearchThis is the second in a series of posts I’m writing about add-ons for Google Chrome that can make web browsing more accessible.  Today, I’m highlighting an extension that offers powerful voice recognition for anyone searching the web. There are several extensions in the Chrome Web Store that will do the same thing.  I’ve tried a couple of these. The one I’m focusing on here isn’t necessarily the best, but it does work well.

Google Chrome Voice Search 02

Voice Search enables you to use voice recognition to search just about anywhere online for almost anything.  To activate Voice Search, after visiting the Chrome Web Store and installing it, you click on the mic icon that installs on the extension bar just to the right of Chrome’s address bar.

Voice Search 01

This brings up a second microphone icon that must be clicked. The dropdown menu beside the mic, lists where you can search, but you don’t need to select this with the mouse.  If you wish, you can simply say where you want to search before saying the search topic.  The list of search engines is customizable via the extension options.  Options for Google Chrome extensions are accessed by right-clicking on the icon in the extension bar.

Voice Search 03 Voice Search 04

I’ve tested ‘Voice Search’ with the built-in mic on my Toshiba Tecra r700, and it has worked remarkably well.  I’ve been especially impressed by how well it has recognized relatively obscure search terms such as “Comox Valley”, where I live now, and “Mussoorie, India”, where I have lived in the past.

Here’s a video that does a great job of demonstrating the power of ‘Voice Search’ with a wide range of voices–male, female, child, adult….

It is worth noting that one of the settings in the Voice Search options is to add a speech input button (the mic icon) to all text boxes.  This works in relatively small text boxes, but not in larger text fields. For example, I was able to use voice recognition to input the title of this blog post, but I am not able to use it to dictate the content of the post.

It is also important to note a caution about Voice Search that is clearly stated in the Chrome Web Store:  ”This extension can access your data on all websites.”  I think this means that you probably will not want to use Voice Search when doing your online banking.

June 21, 2011
by Paul Hamilton
3 Comments

Google Chrome Talks with Speakit!

I’ve long promoted Firefox because of the many Firefox add-ons that help make web browsing accessible for individuals who require alternatives. I’m still a big Firefox fan.  Recently, however, I’ve been looking at Google Chrome. As it has matured, Chrome has become an increasingly accessible browser.  Chrome accessibility is enhanced by add-ons that are available from the Chrome Web Store.  While Google is working to make its products accessible, its ‘Web Store’ does not have an ‘Accessibility’ category.  This means you need to know what you are looking for so you can effectively search for it.  I’ve discovered and tested several helpful Chrome extensions, and I’m sharing the first of these today.

Google Chrome Speakit 02

Speakit! is an extension that provides effective text-to-speech for selected text on any web page.  There are three ways to activate Speakit! and have it read the selected text

  • Click on the icon that installs to the right of the address bar, near the top right corner of the screen.

Speakit

  • Use the context-menu by right-clicking the mouse

Speakit 01

  • Use a customizable keyboard shortcut.  By default this is ctrl + shift + s

Note:  Right-clicking on the Speakit! icon allows you to open an ‘Options’ menu in order to customize the keyboard shortcut or to make sure that Speakit! is enabled in the context menu.

Speakit! automatically detects and provides text-to-speech for all languages supported by Google, with the exception of Bulgarian, Japanese, and Arabic.

June 18, 2011
by Paul Hamilton
1 Comment

Happy Father’s Day

Four Generations

My dad, my son, and my grandson!

It has been way too long since my last post!  There are many reasons, but the biggest is really something quite wonderful.  I have new lenses in both eyes, and this has restored the fabulous long distance vision of my youth.  I’ve been tempted to say “…it was just cataract surgery”, but that would not be accurate.  It was an example of the many miracles of modern medical science.

There was, however, a price to be paid.  For more than three months–from the time of the surgery in my first eye, until I finally received a new set of prescription progressive glasses–there was constant strain in looking from computer screen, to paper pages, to people and back again.  The weariness never seemed to go away, and it was almost more than I could do to keep pace with the essential responsibilities of my day job.  So, I haven’t been blogging.

For what feels like my first post ever, I’ve decided to reflect just a little about fathers, and especially about my own dad.  This is an ‘edublog’, but I believe it’s imperative never to lose sight of the reality that education is supposed to be about far more than school!  When it comes to learning, families matter on many levels.

We’ll celebrate Father’s Day tomorrow in Canada.  I’m the proud father of two adult children.  Our daughter Anjali made me proud in a fresh way this week, as she flew from Vancouver to London, en route to a three month stint as a volunteer nurse on the Africa Mercy, a hospital ship currently docked in Freetown, Sierra Leone.  This coming Tuesday, my son Aaron will be going out of his way to visit my dad, who lives 3000 km away from Aaron’s home here on Vancover Island.  That makes me proud, too.

We don’t choose our parents, but I am blessed to have a truly wonderful father.  My dad was a minister who went to his first church two weeks before my birth.  He has always modeled authenticity and integrity, living through the week what he preached on Sunday.  I have learned much of incalculable value from my dad’s example.

As  a boy, I learned much about our world from his answers to my questions.  On the verge of my own 60th birthday, there are still so many things I know because “that’s what my dad said when I was a boy.”  He was a veritable fountain of knowledge–about history, about how things like electric motors work, about how crops grow, about the reasons for seasons, and about countless other stuff.

Dad was always there for me, and I knew that, whether I wanted him to be there or not.  He never imposed himself on me, but I could always count on him to be there.  He was even there when I attended boarding school a thousand miles from him and our home in Calcutta, as I did for 10 years from the age of 7.  Without fail, dad wrote me a letter every single week that we were apart.  He wrote individual letters to each of his four children!

I could go on for a long time and never say it all.  Suffice it to say that my dad deserves to be honored, and I’m glad Father’s Day has brought this into focus again.  Here’s a video that I put together on the occasion of Dad’s 80th birthday in  2008.  I made the video with exerts from Dad’s own 8mm cinematography between 1952 and 1972–in Southern Ontario, in rural West Bengal, and in the Himalayan foothills.  The focus is sometimes pretty soft, but the film helps to keep the memories bright and warm.

Happy Father’s Day, Dad.  And thanks for being who you are.  I could never have asked for anything more!