[Faith-talk] bookshare and NLS

David Moore jesusloves1966 at gmail.com
Mon May 29 22:00:04 UTC 2017


Hi guys!
When I was in high school, the school made me a life time member of learning ally. I can get on there and download books for free. I got on there and searched, and there are a lot of books pertaining to faith and religion. They are in DAISY format, and you can play them on FS reader that comes with JAWS. I do not know how you would become a member on your own, maybe just by sending a note that you are blind. That is how I got on the NFB news line. What a blessing that is, to read publications from all over the world right on my computer in a very accessible format. Take care, I thought that I would remind you of Learning Ally. They used to be Recording for the Blind and dyslexic. Have a great one!
Sent from Mail for Windows 10

From: Jenny Keller via Faith-Talk
Sent: Monday, May 29, 2017 3:15 PM
To: Faith-talk, for the discussion of Blindness in faith and religion
Cc: Jenny Keller
Subject: Re: [Faith-talk] bookshare and NLS

I mean no disrespect to anyone, but, if we can't ask questions on subjects such as these, why bother having a list at all. I thought that these types of lists answer those questions, if we just googled it. What's the point of having mailing list at all for information?

Sorry, it gets on my nerves, I honestly believe that this is what the email lists are for. Again, if they're not, and if people just have to Google it. Why bother wasting time on email lists for blind people at all.


Jenny

> On May 28, 2017, at 4:17 PM, Ashley Bramlett via Faith-Talk <faith-talk at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi all,
> 
> A few people keep asking about Bookshare versus NLS.
> Might I suggest you all read the info online and decide for yourselves what is right for you.
> 
> There is a significant difference. I prefer audio formats and do not always want to mess with downloading; so I use NLS. Bookshare never seems to have what I want anyways for school when I took classes, or for pleasure reading. 
> 
> Some differences are these.
> 
> 
> First Bookshare is a subscription service; you pay an annual fee and the fee is $75 for new members. The fee after the first year is $50.
> NLS is FREE to individuals although we all pay for it via our taxes.
> NLS is part of the Library of Congress.
> 
> Second, the difference is the formatting. Bookshare books are text based only; either scanned by people or received from publishers. Bookshare books are downloaded in a zipped file.
> The books are available in brf files which is a braille file, pdf, html, and other formats.
> You have to read the books on a pc or other device with text to speech ability or a braille display.
> 
> NLS on the other hand provides books in high quality human speech format. The books are formatted digitally now so you can jump from section to section such as by chapter, heading, or part of a book.
> They are distributed on cartridge or downloaded by you as a patron using some tool. NOT everyone has these technological tools, so I think its great NLS provides the free talking book players. If you can download and have the tools to download and read them yourself, you can do so and get books almost instantly as opposed to waiting for the mail cartridge. Books are played through an app. NLS books are not playable on a pc.
> You can play NLS books using the free app they provide for Kindle fires, android or IOS.
> 
> 
> Third, the difference is the selection of materials.
> Bookshare has more books not only in number but in variety of subjects. Again, they have many academic books which is great for students at any level. 
> They receive publisher files from big companies like W.W. Norton & company, Prentice Hall, and
> Cambridge university press.
> When I was in college before 2010, the only choice for textbooks was RFB, now learning ally.
> Bookshare will be able to get books you request much quicker than NLS does. Keep in mind there is at least a year between a book coming out and when NLS will have it for distribution.
> 
> What does NLS offer for selection?
> Well, NLS offers you books on a variety of subjects to mirror a small to medium sized public library.
> NLS does not focus on academic books. They are unlikely to have books found in your academic libraries.
> NLS offers some religious books but not a lot.
> NLS provides braille music scores and other music appreciation materials. Additionally, they have many popular magazines available in braille, audio formats on a cartridge or downloadable online. You request a subscription through  your network library if you want magazines.
> NLS has some foreign language books as well.
> 
> I hope this clears up the differences between these sources. For more info, read the descriptions online on their websites.
> 
> Ashley
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