Focus on Braille from Torch Trust

The Sight Loss Friendly Church team at Torch Trust present regular webinars for churches, entitled “Focus On …”. They concentrate on various aspects of welcoming, including and empowering blind and partially sighted people in their congregations. In October, in recognition of National Braille Week, the focus was on braille, and the archive has just been made available on their Youtube channel.

You can watch Focus On … Braille here, and if you are part of a church congregation or know someone who is, please share it with them too!

An earlier webinar concentrated on accessible digital documents, for both on-device consumption and conversion into alternative formats including braille. You can watch Focus On … Making your Documents Accessible here.

Join us in the Book Club

Our Book Club is a friendly and supportive group where you can practice your braille reading in a safe space. There are three groups to suit various ability levels and we are always on the lookout for new members.

We are particularly interested in hearing from people who are new to braille or who have just started learning. We have already invited everyone who has completed our recent Braille for Beginners course, but if you’re learning braille elsewhere you would still be welcome.

We will be starting new books on Thursday 5 May at 6:00 PM, and if there is enough interest we will open a fourth group to allow beginners to have more reading time. The first new book for the new group will be “A Place for Pluto”, and following that the group will have the opportunity to choose its own book. One suggestion put forward so far is “Winnie-The-Pooh”.

To express your interest in this new group, please contact Melanie Pritchard by emailing [email protected].

Easter Closure

The Braillists will be taking a break over the Easter period. Our final session before the break will be a Book Club social on Thursday 7 April, and we will return on Saturday 30 April with our face-to-face event in Bristol. Our first online event will follow on Tuesday 3 May.

What Happened at CSUN?

The annual CSUN Assistive Technology Conference took place last week in California, and there were lots of exciting braille and tactile graphics announcements.

This Tuesday, we’ve assembled a line-up of braille-using panellists who attended the conference who will talk us through what was announced and give their first impressions of the new products they saw.

The event starts at 7:30 PM BST and you can register for it here: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZYpcO-sqzktG9TvgYRqSttK4_cqV7zNAiby

To join by telephone, please use these details:

  • Phone number: 0131 460 1196
  • Meeting ID: 824 7645 2710
  • Passcode: 123456

Important Information for Participants in the US: Impact of Daylight Savings Time on Braillists Event Times

The UK will move to British Summer Time on Sunday 27 March, at which point Braillists events will return to their usual US times as follows:

  • Masterclasses, Braille Bar and Braille Improvers: 7:30 PM BST = 2:30 PM EDT, 1:30 PM CDT, 11:30 AM PDT
  • Book Club: 6:00 PM BST = 1:00 PM EDT, 12:00 midday CDT, 10:00 AM PDT

Readers in the UK may ignore this announcement as event times in the UK will remain the same.

Important Information for Participants in the US: Impact of Daylight Savings Time on Braillists Event Times

The US will be moving to Daylight Savings Time on Sunday 13 March. This means that Braillists events will begin an hour later than usual in the US for the next two weeks, as follows:

  • Masterclasses and Braille Bar: 7:30 PM GMT = 3:30 PM EDT, 2:30 PM CDT, 12:30 PM PDT
  • Book Club: 6:00 PM GMT = 2:00 PM EDT, 1:00 PM CDT, 11:00 AM PDT

The UK will be moving to summer time on Sunday 27 March, at which point timings in the US will revert to normal.

Readers in the UK may ignore this announcement as event times in the UK will remain the same.

Welcome to Braille for Beginners!

The first session of our new Braille for Beginners course starts this coming Tuesday (11 January) at 6:00 PM.

You will need pages 1-3 of the resources this week. We will start by introducing Mel and the other members of the Braillists team who will be helping to facilitate the course, and explain what we intend to cover over the next eight weeks. After that, we will move onto pre-braille skills, tracking, and the letters A, L, D and T. Finally, we will explain how braille numbers work.

To register for Braille for Beginners, please use this link: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0rdOGvrzgtH9WTECXlkSsLDU4m5Ow3zqcW

Alternatively, you can join by telephone using these details:

  • Telephone Number: 0131 460 1196
  • Meeting ID: 896 3871 3751
  • Passcode: 325661

For more information about the course, please visit braillists.org/beginners.

This Tuesday: Braille Around the World: a Special Event to mark World Braille Day

We know about braille in the UK, of course, and we regularly hear about braille in other developed English-speaking countries – the US, Australia, New Zealand and so on. But there are many other countries in the world about which we hear much less. How is braille taught? How is it produced? How easy is it to obtain? What braille technology is in use?

Join us at 7:30 PM on Tuesday 4 January to explore these issues in detail. We will be joined by panellists from China, Macedonia and South Africa who will help to set the scene, and we’re inviting you to ask them your questions. You’re also welcome to share your own perspective of international braille.

Please register for this event here: https://is.gd/YZhFWq

N.B. this is a new link. You will need to register even if you have already registered for our other sessions.

Alternatively, to join by phone, use these details:

  • Phone number: 0131 460 1196
  • Meeting ID: 825 7108 7388
  • Passcode: 968997

Protecting Braillists Content Against Copyright Infringement

As the Braillists grows, people are increasingly wanting to share our content. This is fantastic – anything we can do to promote braille and increase braille proficiency is a good thing! But it leaves us vulnerable to misappropriation of our content, use of our content in a way which we might not endorse, or people finding our content without knowing where it originally came from.

We have therefore taken some steps to legally protect our content, which are described below.

Before we do this, though, we would like to reassure everyone of a few fundamental principals:

  1. Our content will remain free of charge
  2. Our content will not be subject to password protection or Digital Rights Management unless there is a specific need for it (e.g. recordings of Braille for Beginners), and in that case the protection measures will remain minimal
  3. You are absolutely permitted to share our content with other people – in fact, we encourage you to do so!

However, we ask that, if you do share our content, you observe the following conditions:

  • Wherever possible, please share a link to the content on either braillissts.org or braillecast.com. Although you are very welcome to share our content on your social media channels and refer to it on your website, we would prefer it if you did not host it on your own servers. In practice, this means you should include a link to our Media page, the relevant episode page on braillecast.com, or the direct MP3 download link from braillists.org or braillecast.com.
  • Please share our content in full, without alteration. For example, you should not attempt to remove the introduction or ending of a Braillecast episode, remove a section from the middle, or indeed only share a section from the middle. If you have a specific reason for needing to edit our content, please obtain written permission from us first.
  • When sharing our content, please make it clear that it came from Braillecast or the Braillists Foundation.
  • If you are sharing our content on a public platform, please tell us about it! We enjoy hearing about people sharing our content and may take the opportunity to promote you in our Newsletter and on our social media channels in return.

In legal terms, we have applied a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License to all of our content retrospectively, and will apply it to all new content going forward. The full license terms can be found on the Creative Commons website via the link above. Appropriate notices have been added to our Media page, all pages on braillecast.com, and the copyright line of the Braillecast RSS feed.

We hope that this makes our position clear, and you agree that we have struck a fair balance between freedom to share our content and protection of our intellectual property. However, should you have any questions or concerns, please do write to us at [email protected] and we will be happy to assist.