This new version offers many performance improvements and optimisations, including a new version of the UKAAF template.
Find out more on the Duxbury What’s New page.
This new version offers many performance improvements and optimisations, including a new version of the UKAAF template.
Find out more on the Duxbury What’s New page.
An exciting new update is available for BrailleNote Touch Plus that offers access to the cloud, improved usability of PowerPoint files, new foreign language braille tables and more.
Find out more by reading the HumanWare news article.
The local Bristol branch of the Braillists is excited to be hosting its first post-pandemic in-person meeting, organised by Paul Sullivan and hosted by Bristol Braille Technology. You don’t have to be from Bristol; everyone who can make it is invited.
Following on from the popular Masterclasses on using braille with iOS, this event will be an opportunity to develop your skills with braille displays on mobile devices such as iPhones and iPads, Kindles and Android devices. If you don’t already use a braille display, it will give you the opportunity to try some out and decide if they are for you. If you have a braille display that can be used with a mobile phone or tablet, you are invited to bring it with you.
The event will take the form of a workshop:
If you have an SD card containing braille books from RNIB and would like it updated with the latest content (2,000 books, originally released in April 2021), James Bowden will be on hand to do this for you. However, all the files on your card will be replaced during the update process, )including documents and other files that you have created yourself) so please remember to back it up before you come, so that you do not lose anything important.
Bristol Braille’s workshop is close to several bus routes passing through East Street, Bedminster and we will organise a pick-up from and to Bristol Temple Meads station.
To register your interest or get more information please email Paul Sullivan at [email protected] with the following details:
Due to limited numbers, registration is on a first come, first served basis. Masks welcome but not required, air purifiers will be running and hand sanitiser made available.
N.B. This event is organised by members of the Braillists community, but run independently of the Braillists Foundation itself. It takes place in the United Kingdom. The Braillists Foundation grew out of these meetings in Bristol so we are very pleased to finally be back!
The Braillists were delighted to have been invited to appear on the Blind Abilities podcast, in conversation with one of our Braille for Beginners participants.
You can listen to the episode here.
The work of the Braillists Foundation, to spread braille literacy during the pandemic, was recognised by the National Braille Press Touch of Genius Prize for Innovation announced in Anaheim earlier last month. The Braillists Foundation received a monitary contribution and an honourable mention at the 37th Annual California State University (CSUN) Assistive Technology Conference on Technology and Disability.
Dave Williams, Chair of the Braillists Foundation, said: “We are thrilled to even be considered for NBP’s Touch of Genius. Massive thank you to the judging panel and huge congratulations to our amazing team of volunteers for all your incredible hard work spreading tactile literacy, especially amongst those denied this opportunity elsewhere. Braille enables blind people to read and write by touch freeing our ears to access the people and places around us, to find our own voices and gain greater confidence and independence.”
Over the past two years, the Braillists Foundation has delivered hundreds of classes online, presentations, and resources for thousands of braille readers across the UK and around the world. The UK-based charity, formally established in early 2020, has provided opportunities for beginners to learn braille, practice sessions, get help and support. The Braillists community provides a safe space where learners can access peer support and encouragement, boosting motivation and engagement at a time when many feel discouraged due to dwindling eyesight. The opportunity to learn a skill like braille is rewarding in itself because of the transformative power and benefits it can bring to its users.
The Braillists Foundation has ambitious plans for the future. They are hoping to offer an on-demand version of Braille for Beginners so people will not be tied to a specific class schedule. They are also planning to enhance their braille learning classes to include contracted braille, and perhaps maths and science.
Please direct non-urgent enquiries to [email protected]. Media enquiries call +447890396117
The International Council on English Braille (ICEB) is pleased to confirm that the midterm meeting of the Executive Committee will be held from Sunday 5th June to Thursday 9th June 2022. The event will be held daily online via Zoom at 20:00 UTC. The virtual meeting will bring the Executive Committee together to discuss ICEB business, including updates on work undertaken by ICEB committees. The meeting will include additional presentations on braille and reports from the member country representatives to ICEB. Observers are welcome to attend.
The deadline to register is the 13th of May, 2022. The meeting agenda, as well as committee and country reports, will be provided to registrants in Word and BRF formats. Visit www.iceb.org/register to complete the registration form.
Those interested are also invited to follow @ICEBbraille on Twitter and the hashtag #ICEB2022 for updates.
Thanks are extended to Braille Literacy Canada (BLC) for hosting the meeting in collaboration with ICEB. We look forward to connecting with you all in a week dedicated to braille!
The International Council on English Braille (ICEB) was formed in 1991 and provides a forum for international cooperation among those countries that use English-language braille by assisting countries to establish standard-setting bodies in relation to braille codes and practices; working towards the development and adoption of international minimum standards for the production and teaching of braille; and facilitating the exchange of braille materials between member countries. Its members currently include braille authorities from Australia, Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, South Africa, the United Kingdom, and the United States. To learn more about ICEB, visit http://www.iceb.org or write to [email protected].
The Queensland Department of Education’s Statewide Vision Impairment Services team is pleased to announce that our Braille Letter Songs are now available online. The 26 Braille letter songs include the braille dot numbers and alphabetic word sign contractions for each letter of the English alphabet. Dot numbers are linked to consistent musical pitches to ensure that each song has a unique melody and to assist with the memorisation of each letter’s braille formation.
The songs can be found on Soundcloud here.
American Printing House for the Blind, 6 April 2022
Imagine reading an interesting article or editing a hefty document with no way to navigate by page or heading, only able to scroll down one line at a time. Braille readers experience this tedium whenever they access digital braille files, making reading at home, in the classroom, and in the workplace a slow process. We think it’s time to take the braille file into the 21st century. In collaboration with leaders from across the field, APH is developing a new, revolutionary braille file standard that will be accessible on both braille displays and embossers and will change the way students, teachers, and transcribers interact with braille and tactile graphics. We’re calling it the eBRF.
For more information, read the article on the APH website.
The American Printing House for the Blind is pleased to announce the release of an update to its popular Send to Braille application. This is a simple tool which adds options to the right click “Send to” menu to translate documents into braille and vice-versa.
This new version incorporates the latest versions of Liblouis and Pandoc, the two tools which power it. It will now handle UEB translation much more effectively and it supports translating multiple files at once.
You can download Send to Braille for free here.
This is open source software. If you are a programmer, the source code is available on Github, and this new version has been detached from the internal build system at APH so it is now much easier to contribute code. The Send to Braille team welcome any and all contributions which will improve and extend the functionality of the software.
Finally, the changes under the hood in this new version make it much easier to keep Liblouis up-to-date, so updates should be more forthcoming in future.
Have you learnt grade 1 braille and want to know where to go next? Are you learning grade 2 braille but need some help?
If so, our new “Braille Improvers” session is for you!
It is not a braille lesson, but we will share useful resources, tips and tricks, learning strategies and answer your questions.
This session will take place on the first Tuesday of the month at 7:30 PM in April, May and June. If it is successful we will consider making it a regular fixture in the Braillists calendar. Anyone is welcome, but it is particularly designed for people who have completed our recent Braille for Beginners course.
We ask that questions remain relevant to an audience that is not especially familiar with braille. Complex coding or technology questions are better suited to our regular Braille Bar, which will continue after the Easter break.
Or, to join by phone, use these details: