Book ID: CBB001422605

Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology (2015)

unapi

Petrick, Elizabeth (Author)


Johns Hopkins University Press


Publication Date: 2015
Physical Details: viii + 196 pp.; ill.; notes; index
Language: English

In 1974, not long after developing the first universal optical character recognition technology, Raymond Kurzweil struck up a conversation with a blind man on a flight. Kurzweil explained that he was searching for a use for his new software. The blind man expressed interest: One of the frustrating obstacles that blind people grappled with, he said, was that no computer program could translate text into speech. Inspired by this chance meeting, Kurzweil decided that he must put his new innovation to work to "overcome this principal handicap of blindness." By 1976, he had built a working prototype, which he dubbed the Kurzweil Reading Machine. This type of innovation demonstrated the possibilities of computers to dramatically improve the lives of people living with disabilities. In Making Computers Accessible, Elizabeth R. Petrick tells the compelling story of how computer engineers and corporations gradually became aware of the need to make computers accessible for all people. Motivated by user feedback and prompted by legislation such as the Americans with Disabilities Act, which offered the promise of equal rights via technological accommodation, companies developed sophisticated computerized devices and software to bridge the accessibility gap. People with disabilities, Petrick argues, are paradigmatic computer users, demonstrating the personal computer's potential to augment human abilities and provide for new forms of social, professional, and political participation. Bridging the history of technology, science and technology studies, and disability studies, this book traces the psychological, cultural, and economic evolution of a consumer culture aimed at individuals with disabilities, who increasingly rely on personal computers to make their lives richer and more interconnected.

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Reviewed By

Review Fiorella Battaglia (2016) Review of "Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology". Metascience: An International Review Journal for the History, Philosophy and Social Studies of Science (pp. 279-280). unapi

Review B. Kirkpatrick; J. Ward (2019) Review of "Faxed: The Rise and Fall of the Fax Machine". IEEE Annals of the History of Computing (pp. 51-54). unapi

Review Meryl Alper (October 2016) Review of "Making Computers Accessible: Disability Rights and Digital Technology". Technology and Culture (pp. 1043-1044). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001422605/

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Authors & Contributors
Petrick, Elizabeth
Priestley, Mark
Nofre, David
Alberts, Gerard
Allen, Ben
Paulsen, G.
Concepts
Computers and computing
Software
Programming languages
Computer industry
Computer science
Business and commerce
Time Periods
20th century, late
21st century
20th century
20th century, early
Places
United States
Japan
Europe
California (U.S.)
Institutions
FACT
Computer Sciences Corporation
National Institute of Health (U.S.)
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