Q&A: IBM seeks to make streaming media accessible to visually impaired
Researcher Chieko Asakawa wants all Web users to 'see' multimedia content
March 26, 2007 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - IBM researcher Chieko Asakawa has been blind since she was 14 years old. Since joining IBM in Japan in 1985, she has worked on myriad projects to improve accessibility for the visually impaired. Asakawa, now a senior accessibility researcher at IBM's Tokyo Research Laboratory, has been working on nonvisual computer interfaces in an effort to improve Web accessibility and usability for the visually impaired and others with special needs. She helped develop the IBM Home Page Reader in 1997 and a digital Braille system and three key applications, including a Braille Editing System to allow users to easily input and edit Braille using an ordinary keyboard and monitor. In 2004, she and her team also previewed a disability simulator that helps Web designers ensure that their pages are accessible and usable by visually impaired users. And over the last year, she and a team of four researchers have been working to make it possible for blind and visually impaired users to access multimedia content online, using a keyboard to control media player software. She discussed her work last week via e-mail from Tokyo.
Excerpts from that interview follow:
IBM researcher Chieko Asakawa
The tool set provides the user with keyboard-controlled ways to run some media player applications, such as starting the video, stopping it, rewinding it, etc.? Without the tool set, these functions can't be controlled with a keyboard? The tool is compatible with Windows Media Player and Flash. Users only need to know a unified shortcut key operation to run video and animation. Previously, these functions could not be controlled by using a keyboard since the images that are up on the Web sites are only controllable by pointing and clicking a mouse, especially for embedded players in Web pages. Only very rarely, there might be a case where there are play/stop and volume up/down buttons that can be operated with a keyboard. However, it is hardly possible to find out the existence of such buttons while video is playing due to conflicts with screen reading software.
Chieko Asakawa
Additional Resources



Learn the important issues you must consider before starting your next mobility initiative. Get your mobility white paper from IDC now, compliments of Sybase.
White Papers & Webcasts
Oracle Accelerate - Not Just Smart but Timely
Download Now!
Why BI is Ripe - Now! - For Businesses of Any Size
Download Now!
Showcase ISV Products with BIRT
View this now!
Create Mashups in ISV Applications
View this now!
HP Technology Guide for Scalable Business Solutions
Download This Resource Now!
Maximize the Value of ISV Applications
View this now!

