[blindlaw] National Federation of the Blind and Motorola to Cooperate on Making Cell Phones Accessible to the Blind
WB
mruniverse08 at gmail.com
Mon Sep 14 17:09:41 UTC 2009
This is really great. Between this, I-Phone and the various other mobile
phones, we are definitely coming a long way.
-----Original Message-----
From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Freeh, Jessica (by way of David Andrews <dandrews at visi.com>)
Sent: Monday, September 14, 2009 11:30 AM
To: david.andrews at nfbnet.org
Subject: [blindlaw] National Federation of the Blind and Motorola to
Cooperate on Making Cell Phones Accessible to the Blind
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
Chris Danielsen
Director of Public Relations
National Federation of the Blind
(410) 659-9314, extension 2330
(410) 262-1281 (Cell)
<mailto:cdanielsen at nfb.org>cdanielsen at nfb.org
Jennifer Erickson
Motorola, Inc.
(847) 435-5320
Jennifer.erickson at motorola.com
National Federation of the Blind and Motorola
to Cooperate on Making Cell Phones Accessible to the Blind
Baltimore, Maryland and Libertyville, Illinois (September 14, 2009):
The National Federation of the Blind, the nation's oldest and largest
organization of blind people and the leading advocate for making
mainstream devices accessible to the blind, and Motorola Inc., a
leading manufacturer of cell phones and other mobile communications
devices, announced today that they have entered into a cooperation
agreement to promote technologies that improve the accessibility of
cell phones to blind consumers.
Certain future Motorola cell phones will provide verbal readouts of
information such as the time and date, battery level, signal
strength, user's phone number, caller ID information for incoming
calls, missed and received calls, and voice mail alerts. Blind users
will also be able to take advantage of verbal readouts and
voice-command features for ring tone status, inputting and accessing
contacts, and various other settings. Motorola expects these cell
phones to be available in 2010. The parties have also agreed to work
together to make additional phones and features accessible to blind users.
Dr. Marc Maurer, President of the National Federation of the Blind,
said: "In an age where productivity and success increasingly depend
on access to mobile technology such as cellular telephones, it is
critical that blind Americans have equal access to today's cell
phones through user interfaces that do not require vision. The
National Federation of the Blind appreciates Motorola's commitment to
making the features of its cell phone products accessible to blind
users without the need for third-party software, and we look forward
to working together with Motorola to make future improvements to the
accessibility of telecommunication technology."
###
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