Reading a blog posting from Blind Flaneur I was inspired by these words.. “Producing a book accessible to blind readers probably wasn’t one of Boyle’s motives when he decided to release it in the public domain.. [actually, under a Creative Commons License, JB].. but it was an effortless, built-in consequence. It’s an excellent example of what I mean when I talk about re-imagining accessibility.” I loved the idea that audio books digitally accessible to blind readers could be machine generated from Creative Commons licensed works without fuss, hassle or lawyers — openness has unanticipated benefits. (Hint — tagged pdfs with built in chapter divisions etc. make things much easier in the process, I understand) I had corresponded with Mr. Willis, the author of Blind Flaneur, and was wondering how to generate a high quality audio book for blind readers. No need — Greg Kearney of the Curtin University Centre for Accessible Technology saw the book and, because of the CC license, was able to generate a DAISY talking book version, which is now available to anyone in the world with an internet connection. Basically the DAISY format uses machine markup inside of documents to generate an audio book neatly divided into chapters. The link goes to the The Talking Book Library of Western Australia. When you download the zip archive, you find a playlist — open it in I Tunes or your audio reader, and you are off to the races.. An eery but not unpleasant machine voice proceeds to read you the book. (Imagine my book read aloud by the computer in 2001: A Space Odyssey… “I hear you are enclosing the public domain, Dave… That’s a really bad idea, Dave.”) You can jump around by chapter and even explore the further reading. To give you a sense of what it sounds like, here is a fragment… An Environmentalism for Information
(Surely there are skins one can put on one’s audio reader so that all books would be read by Winston Churchill, or Niko from the Velvet Underground who, come to think of it, became famous by sounding like a computer anyway…)