[gui-talk] Fwd: E-Access Bulletin: August 2006
Steve Pattison
srp at internode.on.net
Sat Aug 12 11:57:41 CDT 2006
>From: Dan Jellinek dan at headstar.com
>To: eaccess at headstar.com
>
>++E-ACCESS BULLETIN.
>- ISSUE 80, AUGUST 2006.
>
>Technology news for people with vision impairment
>( http://www.headstar.com/eab/ ).
>Sponsored by:
>RNIB
>( http://www.rnib.org.uk )
>BT Age and Disability Unit
>( http://www.btplc.com/age_disability/ )
>Ford Motor Company
>( http://www.ford.co.uk )
>
>NOTE: Please forward this free bulletin to others (subscription details
>at the end). We conform to the accessible Text Email Newsletter
>(TEN) Standard:
>http://www.headstar.com/ten/ .
>
>
>++Special Notice: 'e-Access '06' - Technology For All.
>- 14 September 2006
>- New Connaught Rooms, London.
>
>'e-Access'06' is the UK's leading annual event on access by people
>with disabilities to all technologies. The conference and exhibition
>focuses on how digital technology both enables and prevents people
>with disabilities to achieve greater independence.
>
>Speakers include Peter White, BBC Disability Affairs Correspondent;
>Kevin Carey, vice-chair RNIB and Ofcom Content Board Member;
>and Guido Gybels, Director of New Technologies, RNID. Sponsors
>include BSkyB, BT, Jadu and Ford.
>
>Places cost 195 pounds for public sector, 295 pounds for private sector
>and 145 pounds for small charities and not-for-profit organisations (all
>prices exclude VAT) See:
>http://www.headstar-events.com/eaccess06/ .
>
>[Special Notice ends]
>
>
>++Issue 80 Contents.
>
>++Section One: News.
>
>01: Google Research Labs Launches Accessible Search Service
>- pages ranked according to accessibility rating.
>
>02: Access To Work Funding Closed To Central Government
>- funding for disabled employees handed to private sector.
>
>03: Voice Activation Software Offers 99 Per Cent Accuracy
>- new version of product for PCs and mobile devices launched.
>
>04: Free Screen Reader Released Online
>- Thunder goes on the market, free to individual users.
>
>News in Brief: 05: Shopping Trip - supermarket sites reviewed; 06:
>Cheap Talk - free and discounted; 07: Sprechen ze English? - free
>online language courses.
>
>Section Two: 'The Inbox' - Readers' Forum.
>08: Records Straight - British Museum responses; 09: E-Group Debate
>- continuing discussion on forums' accessibility.
>
>Section Three: Focus - Accessible DVD.
>10: A Victory for Persistent Pestering: Navigating DVDs can be hard
>work even when they contain audio description but, a prototype
>product was unveiled at last month's Sight Village conference, that
>looks set to improve DVD accessibility. Dan Jellinek heard the latest
>on this and other key developments in audio description.
>
>Section Four: Focus - Accessible Gaming Part One
>11: The Fight for Real World Innovation. Exciting developments are
>underway in the real and virtual worlds of accessible games
>development - just as well, according to one expert, who says
>imagination in the area of audio games has been lacking. Mel Poluck
>reports.
>
>[Contents ends].
>
>
>++Sponsored Notice: BT's Age and Disability Unit
>- Helping People to Communicate.
>
>Communication is at the heart of BT's business, and the aim of BT's
>Age & Disability (A&D) unit is to increase disabled people's
>opportunities to communicate with the world around them.
>
>Our research suggests that 23 million adults might be digitally
>excluded by 2025 if more is not done to encourage their use of the
>Internet. Our online guide to broadband
>http://www.btplc.com/age_disability/technology/broadband/guide/
>provides our older and disabled customers with a step by step guide to
>understanding and ordering broadband, specific examples of how
>broadband may benefit them including case studies, and a number of
>easy options for ordering BT Broadband.
>
>For more information about BT's Age and Disability work visit
>http://www.btplc.com/age_disability/ .
>[Sponsored Notice ends].
>
>Section One: News.
>
>+01: Google Research Labs Launches Accessible Search Service.
>
>Search engine giant Google has launched a service that prioritises its
>search results according to the accessibility of web pages it finds. In
>addition to standard search criteria, Google Accessible Search
>( http://labs.google.com/accessible/ )
>is designed to rank pages according to how much graphic content they
>contain and how easy they are to navigate using keystrokes only.
>
>According to project leader TV Raman, of Google's research labs,
>Accessible Search is the first step in the company's strategy to make
>online content more easily available to people with disabilities. "The
>launch of Google Accessible search is a positive step towards our
>overall goal of making the world's information accessible and we're
>very excited about it," he told E-Access Bulletin.
>
>According to Raman, work on Google Accessible Search is far from
>finished. "This is an early stage Labs product, and we are planning to
>enrich our features and functionality based on user feedback," he said.
>Future developments will include versions tailored to different
>countries, available in new languages. "Our goal is to provide a more
>useful and accessible web search for the future and as part of this
>commitment we'll continue to refine and improve upon Accessible
>Search in many ways including eventually making it available in other
>languages and countries," he said.
>
>"In the past, visually challenged and blind Google users have often
>waded through a lot of inaccessible websites and pages to find the
>information they want or need. While we still have a lot of work to do,
>Accessible Search is an important step and I hope it improves web
>search accessibility for other people like me who are blind or visually
>impaired," he said.
>
>Interestingly, entering the search terms "search engine" produces
>results that rank Google below one of its main competitors MSN,
>suggesting that the company may need to improve the accessibility of
>its own web pages.
>
>
>+02: Access To Work Funding Closed To Central Government.
>
>Disability groups have reacted with dismay to news that Access to
>Work funding is to be cut for all central government departments. The
>funding, which has been available since 1994, pays cash sums to
>employers for modifications or specialist equipment needed by
>disabled people in the workplace.
>
>"We're very concerned about this, it doesn't augur well for the future,"
>a spokesperson for the Disability Rights Commission (DRC -
>http://www.drc-gb.org/)
>told E-Access Bulletin. According to the DRC, payments under the
>Access to Work scheme have already stopped at the Department for
>Work and Pensions, the central government body responsible for
>administering the scheme, and other departments will follow suit.
>
>According to DRC, the cuts will make it more difficult for central
>government departments meet their own commitments for employing
>people with disabilities. "They are already miserably off-target," said
>the spokesperson. In addition, the cuts come at a time of government
>reforms to the incapacity benefits system aiming to encourage
>recipients back into work. "Our position is that if this is achieved by
>punishment, penalties and sanctions, without the support disabled
>people need it would be brutalism of the worst sort," said the DRC.
>
>According to DWP, the Access to Work funding previously made
>available to central government will now be paid to private sector
>employers. However, according to the DRC, the government's efforts
>to raise awareness of the funding have been poor. "It's been one of the
>best kept secrets of central government," said the spokesperson.
>According to a report presented to Parliament in October 2005, three-
>quarters of British employers have never heard of the scheme
>( http://fastlink.headstar.com/mem1 ).
>
>
>+03: Voice Activation Software Offers 99 Per Cent Accuracy
>
>A new product from voice technology developer Nuance, Dragon
>Naturally Speaking 9, offers unprecedented levels of voice control over
>PCs and handheld devices.
>
>The product
>( http://fastlink.headstar.com/dragon1),
>which removes the need for keystrokes and mouse movements, is
>claimed by Nuance to be 20 per cent more accurate than the product it
>replaces, taking accuracy levels to around 99 per cent.
>
>Naturally Speaking 9 can also process voice input at speeds up to 160
>words per minute, which means that it is faster and more precise than
>typing. Nuance also claims that enhancements to the software
>eliminate the need for lengthy training to respond properly to the user's
>voice.
>The new release integrates with Microsoft Office, Outlook and Internet
>Explorer, as well as Corel and WordPerfect products. Naturally
>Speaking is also compatible with popular open source-based products
>such as Mozilla Firefox and Thunderbird. The product also supports
>wireless technology, being compatible with Nuance-approved
>Bluetooth headsets.
>"It's a tremendous product, there's nothing else like it," Brian Hartgen
>of TandT Consultancy told E-Access Bulletin.
>
>+04: Free Screen Reader Released Online.
>
>A free screen reader has been launched at Sight Village, the annual
>vision impairment conference dedicated to blindness issues in
>Birmingham, UK.
>
>The software, called Thunder, which provides all on-screen content as
>'spoken' audio output, can be downloaded from Screenreader.net
>( http://www.screenreader.net ),
>a new, non-profit, community interest company (CIC) from Choice
>Technology. Thunder was developed in partnership with international
>assistive technology UK company Sensory Software
>( http://www.sensorysoftware.com/ ).
>
>The screen reader is free to individual users, although organisations
>must pay a yearly subscription according to their size. Users will need
>a computer running Windows 2000, XP or Vista as well as speakers or
>headphones. "It will meet most of the needs of many blind users
>whether beginners or seasoned operators," Roger Wilson-Hinds, co-
>director of Screenreader.net, told E-Access Bulletin.
>"Apart from being free to blind home users, there is far less chance of
>conflict with other software running on a computer. This has very
>positive support implications and is great for family users"
>Other screen readers on the market include the widely-used 'JAWS for
>Windows' from US company Freedom Scientific, which costs 800
>pounds and Window Eyes from GW Micro, also in the US, which costs
>380 pounds. Another free screen reader 'Orca' is currently under
>development as the default screen reader of Ubuntu, an operating
>system based on the Linux open source platform.
>
>"We support anything that will give visually impaired people more
>access to technology at a lower cost," RNIB's Head of Products and
>Publications John Godber, in response to the launch.
>
>
>++News in Brief:
>
>+05: Shopping Trip: The Tesco website is the only supermarket site to
>exceed minimum accessibility requirements according to the 'State of
>the e-nation' report from AbilityNet. The research used manual and
>automated checks to review accessibility and usability. Morrisons was
>found to be the second most accessible although visitors cannot buy
>directly from the site:
>http://fastlink.headstar.com/an1 .
>
>+06: Cheap Talk: Some 300 talking glucose meters are to be made
>available to vision impaired Diabetics on low incomes following a
>Diabetes UK campaign about the high cost of the device. The price of
>the Sensocard Plus Meter, which measures blood glucose levels, has
>been lowered from 150 to 50 pounds and is available from Diabetes
>UK, among others:
>http://fastlink.headstar.com/diab1 .
>
>+07: Sprechen ze English?: Free online English and German language
>courses aimed at vision impaired learners have gone live. Intermediate
>and advanced courses are offered to native speakers of Czech, English,
>German, Norwegian, Slovak and Spanish. The courses aim to enhance
>employment opportunities. The courses have been designed to work on
>both open source and proprietary browsers:
>http://eurochance.brailcom.org/ .
>
>
>[Section One ends].
>
>
>++Section Two: 'The Inbox'
>- Readers' Forum.
>
>Please email all contributions or responses to
>inbox at headstar.com .
>
>
>+08: Records Straight: Matthew Cock of the New Media Unit at the
>British Museum writes in response to a story published in the last
>issue, 'British Museum Launches Audio Described Online
>Collections.' Matthew writes: "I would like to set a few things straight
>about the two features we've launched. We've added one new tour with
>Audio Description of 20 objects to COMPASS
>(www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/compass),
>not a series of tours, as your article stated.
>
>"The article says '. . . some people reported the galleries' audio
>programmes to be lacking in detail.' We're not aware of any problems
>or comments on the content of the tours and we're not clear what you
>mean by the 'galleries' audio programmes. We've offered a web-based
>service for the Museum's web visitors, not at this stage part of any
>wider programme in the British Museum or sector.
>
>"The article also states 'There are links on each web page
>containing an mp3 sound file of a description of a specific object
>which can be downloaded onto portable mp3 players.' This is in fact
>the primary way that we have offered the audio files. Visitors to the
>site can listen to the audio through their web browser, or download the
>file for future use on their mp3 players.
>
>"Regarding the text-to-speech facility, Readspeaker, which we've
>launched on children's COMPASS
>(www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/childrenscompass),
>is aimed mainly at children with reading difficulties, and not, as you
>say in your article, visually impaired. We've been very careful not to
>claim this as a facility primarily aimed at improving access for blind
>and partially sighted users, as we have been advised that Readspeaker,
>is not an adequate substitute for screen readers or magnification
>software.
>
>"I'm sorry to say audio is not yet available on any of the public access
>terminals inside the Museum, though this is of course highly desirable,
>and something we're working on offering in the future."
>[further responses to inbox at headstar.com]
>
>
>Gustaw Kon from Germany also writes in response to the British
>Museum story: "It is good that your sponsors got their advert. Their
>product is pricey and only suitable for organisations.
>
>"No mention was made of the URL of the British Museum audio
>description site. Kind of useless really! [You could] just give the web
>address and let all those interested log on and make their own decisions
>and comments. Simple, don't you think? Cheap too, dare I say
>obvious?
>
>[Editor's Note: Readspeaker are not currently sponsors of any of our
>activities, and the decision to cover the story was made independently
>by
>our editorial team. The omission of the web address was regrettable,
>however, and an oversight: we always intend to list all relevant web
>addresses in our stories. So apologies for that.]
>[further responses to inbox at headstar.com]
>
>
>+09: E-Group Debate: The debate on accessible e-groups continues.
>Deborah Hart of Women in London's Microyster computer group
>writes: "I was so astonished to see [Rich Caloggero's] reply to the
>enquiry you posted for me. Anyone who has used Yahoo will know
>that to configure a group you have to access the options via the
>web. Not only does this take you through the hideous process of
>creating a Yahoo identity - Google groups at least have an accessible
>alternative to the captcha graphic they use - but then all the other
>options of whether the group is to be private, how emails are to be
>delivered, etc, have to be set up via the web. This is also true for
>individual subscribers who may want to only receive emails as a
>digest.
>
>"This is very disheartening. Despite the millions of pounds going
>into voluntary sector ICT via the Change Up scheme, very few
>practical day-to-day working solutions are likely to result, just more
>websites, and second tier groups giving theoretical advice.
>
>I suspect a Mailman [the free software for managing electronic mail
>discussion and e-newsletter lists] type list would be easier to
>administer, but this type of service is usually out of the league of small
>self help groups. I was hoping to hear of a system that would allow a
>group of women with disabilities to be independent of 'help'.
>[further responses to inbox at headstar.com].
>
>On the same topic and in response to Rich Caloggero's contribution on
>e-groups last issue, Kim Walker writes: "I am a freelance computer
>adviser assisting charities for the disabled in Edinburgh, Scotland. A
>chat group for some disabled people is required and Yahoo groups may
>be the answer but, although it is good to see that [their] Captcha is not
>a problem, is the Yahoo groups' site W3C Web Accessibility Initiative
>approved? Is it truly accessible to people using screen readers, switch
>access, on-screen keyboards or keyboards only, for example? If not,
>could you recommend any Bobby approved sites that would qualify,
>which are not barred by the Captcha problem?
>[further responses to inbox at headstar.com].
>
>[Inbox ends]
>
>
>++Section Three: Focus
>- Accessible DVD.
>
>+10: A Victory for Persistent Pestering.
>by Dan Jellinek.
>
>The menus on DVD disks are hard enough to navigate for sighted
>people, with jumbles of animated images often overlaid with confusing
>text menus leading to different episode or scene selections, and other
>disk features.
>
>For blind people, however, finding one's way around a disk is all but
>impossible, even if the disk features an audio description track which
>allows them to enjoy and understand the film itself. The problem is,
>how does the user know how to access the audio description track, or
>how to choose an episode, or even know which disk is which?
>
>At last month's annual Sight Village conference in Birmingham
>( http://www.qac.ac.uk/sightvillage ),
>for which E-Access Bulletin was the main media partner, a prototype
>talking DVD disk was unveiled by the RNIB aimed at tackling these
>problems.
>
>Currently in development in partnership with the BBC, which has
>implemented it on its new Doctor Who DVDs, the disk automatically
>starts with audio navigation, and then you use up and down arrows to
>access spoken commands such as Episode Selection, Play All or
>Special Features. Other functions reveal how many options there are,
>and give an overview of the disk's entire contents.
>
>"For the first time, absolutely everything on the disk's menus can be
>accessed through sound," Joan Greening of the RNIB told delegates.
>
>The Dr Who disks talk as soon as you put them into an ordinary
>mainstream DVD player. "It says 'Series 1, Disk 3', or whatever, so it
>is immediately clear which one it is out of a potential jumble of disks.
>How often have you dropped the lot on the floor?" Greening said, to
>sympathetic murmurs from the audience.
>
>Greening says the RNIB would like this prototype development work
>to lead to an industry standard for audio navigation, but it would be a
>de facto standard rather than a formal technical standard with the RNIB
>as its guardian. "We just want it to be out there."
>
>As well as audio navigation, which was needed on all disks, as many
>films as possible needed to be audio described, she said. The whole
>Doctor Who series is audio-described, following talks with the RNIB,
>as are around 150 films, most of which are listed on the RNIB website
>at:
>http://www.rnib.org.uk/dvd
>
>Audio description is now part of the mainstream product for these
>DVDs, something for which the RNIB and other campaigners had been
>pressing for years, Greening said. "It will normally say on the back of
>the box if it is audio described".
>
>Notable recent victories for Greening's own long-term, dogged
>campaigning work for RNIB have been pledges from Buena Vista and
>Warner Brothers to audio describe all future films, she says. Part of the
>problem faced has been identifying the right person to lobby in each
>film company, she says, as most do not have anyone tasked specifically
>with improving the accessibility of their output. But her persistence has
>paid off. "I'm like a dog with a bone, I don't give up, and I can pull in
>people to support us like people from the UK Film Council.
>
>"Without RNIB there would be no audio description in this country, it
>would not be in the cinemas, it would not be on DVDs. If you ever go
>to broadcasting meetings, there is never anyone there representing
>blind people unless we are there. But we're there now at Ofcom and
>other meetings. Now we're leading the world in audio description.
>
>Also on display in Birmingham this year was the Digital Media Centre
>from Portset Systems, the first receiver and player for TV, radio and
>teletext purpose-built for blind people
>( http://www.portset.co.uk/pdmc.htm ).
>
>The Portset device is the size of a largeish set-top box, and
>automatically tunes in to receive all Freeview TV channels, radio and
>teletext and output all signals as audio only. No TV screen is needed,
>although the device can have a picture signal routed through it to a TV
>set and tune in to a different channel at the same time.
>
>A series of large, colourful buttons of different shapes laid out in
>logical clusters allows users to navigate channels and access an
>electronic programme guide that includes current and future
>programme start, finish and running times, plus descriptions of what is
>on now and what is on next. A teach mode helps users learn keypad
>functions and layouts.
>
>The device receives digital radio, although it does not convert the text
>information stream broadcast with digital radio into an audio stream. It
>can record radio or TV onto an internal hard drive with a
>programmable timer setting, although it does not connect to a
>computer. It can play CDs and an upgrade to the system allows it to
>play DVDs, although it cannot record to DVD.
>
>At a cost of 859 pounds, it is not cheap, so it remains to be seen how
>many users will opt for specialist systems such as this now rather than
>wait to see if cheaper mainstream technologies are made more
>accessible and usable through innovations like the DVD audio
>navigation being developed by the RNIB and the BBC.
>
>[Section three ends].
>
>
>++Section Two - Focus
>Accessible Gaming Part One
>
>+00: The Fight for Real World Innovation
>by Mel Poluck.
>
>"There are too few examples of game accessibility," Richard van Tol
>told E-Access Bulletin at last month's annual game developers
>conference Develop held this year in Brighton, England and hosted by
>Independent Game Developers Association ( IGDA -
>http://www.igda.org/ ).
>
>There are around 200 audio games - those that use only sound to guide
>players - in existence today. Many are based on traditional board
>games such as Monopoly with sound added to represent players
>moving squares, picking a card and so on. But the majority are "boring
>and behind the times," according to van Tol, of the Bartiméus
>Accessibility Foundation
>( http://fastlink.headstar.com/bart1 )
>in the Netherlands, and a member of IGDA's game accessibility
>special interest group (GA SIG -
>http://www.igda.org/accessibility/ ).
>
>"If you compare games from five years ago to now, there's hardly any
>increase in quality," said van Tol. He said the audio quality of many
>accessible games is basic, with some even sounding akin to alarm
>clocks. "That's what we're trying to change with the SIG," he said.
>Van Tol said many of the most innovative and exciting examples of
>accessible or audio games are to be found in the form of research and
>development projects of University students and this must change.
>
>The GA SIG has among it's objectives: ". . . to help bridge the
>knowledge gap about how to increase the accessibility of mainstream
>games that exists between disability groups and game developers and
>game developers and publishers." In closing or at least narrowing this
>chasm, the group acts as an intermediary between disabled gamers and
>the mainstream game development industry, and informs companies
>creating accessible games will ultimately increase their market.
>
>The group also notifies companies when they unwittingly create
>accessible games, a not uncommon occurrence according to van Tol.
>Video or arcade games are good examples. "Many are automatically
>accessible but the developers don't know that," said van Tol. "The
>genre of 'beat-em-up' games is really accessible," he told E-Access
>Bulletin. Last year the GA SIG told the company behind one popular
>mainstream games console their efforts to add extra features such as
>adjustable font size, considered "cool" and perhaps even gimmicky to
>sighted players, were in fact making their games accessible to vision
>impaired gamers and consequently opening their market.
>
>Now, in the bid to lift flagging innovation and encourage the
>development of more imaginative accessible games, the GA SIG has
>invited some of the world's largest technology companies to submit
>games accessible to the widest possible audience for a worldwide
>contest, 'Accessibility idol.' Contestants will demonstrate their
>accessible game in a 'show' in the style of the popular TV singing
>contest Pop Idol at the Game Developers Conference in San Francisco
>next March. The GA SIG team are seeking judges and disabled
>'coaches' to advise contestants as their game develops.
>
>Another competition from game remake company Retro Remakes
>( http://www.retroremakes.com/comp2006/ )
>calls on contestants to create: 'good remakes of good games that
>anyone can play, regardless of their ability.'
>
>And games programmers and writers are invited to submit entries for a
>contest for a contest from free online computer software resource
>Donation Coder
>( http://fastlink.headstar.com/agame1 ),
>based in the US. Entrant submit their games in two categories: audio-
>only or 'switch' games, where the only input is a single button, such as
>the spacebar, for people with mobility impairments.
>
>But there are new signs emerging of innovative accessible games
>development. One of the most exciting examples is a location-based
>game for vision impaired and sighted players that uses satellite
>navigation system Global Positioning System (GPS) and 3D sound to
>guide vision impaired players to move around a large physical area
>such as a field or large room as they play. A shooting game, the player
>is equipped with a backpack containing a laptop, headphones, a GPS
>module, a head tracker and a modified joystick. The development
>team, comprising seven students under the Bartiméus Accessibility
>Foundation, are presently seeking funding to release the game, Demor,
>on the market.
>( http://www.demor.nl/ ).
>
>But to improve the accessibility overall of games, and to begin to make
>imaginative, exciting games the norm, van Tol calls on gamers
>themselves to make a noise. "I've noticed especially on [blind gamers'
>online magazine] Audessey, many gamers want to make themselves
>heard. The blind community is active but only within its own silo,"
>said van Tol. "We need a community of disabled gamers to stand up
>and talk to the industry and make themselves heard more."
>[Section Four ends].
>
>++Special Notice: Web Accessibility Forum.
>
>Accessify Forum is a discussion forum devoted to all topics relating to
>web accessibility. Topics cover everything from 'Beginners' and 'Site
>building and testing' through to projects such as the new accessibility
>testing tool WaiZilla and the accessibility of the open source forum
>software itself.
>
>All you need to register is a working email address, so come along and
>join in the fun at:
>http://www.accessifyforum.com .
>
>[Special notice ends].
>
>
>++End Notes.
>
>+How to Receive the Bulletin.
>
>To subscribe to this free monthly bulletin, email
>eab-subs at headstar.com with 'subscribe eab' in the subject header.
>You can list other email addresses to subscribe in the body of the
>message. Please encourage all your colleagues to sign up! To
>unsubscribe at any time, put 'unsubscribe eab' in the subject header.
>
>Please send comments on coverage or leads to Dan Jellinek at:
>dan at headstar.com .
>
>Copyright 2006 Headstar Ltd http://www.headstar.com .
>The Bulletin may be reproduced as long as all parts including this
>copyright notice are included, and as long as people are always
>encouraged to subscribe with us individually by email. Please also
>inform the editor when you are reproducing our content. Sections of
>the bulletin may be quoted as long as they are clearly sourced as 'taken
>from e-access bulletin, a free monthly email newsletter', and our web
>site address http://www.headstar.com/eab is also cited.
>
>+Personnel:
>Editor - Dan Jellinek
>Deputy editor - Derek Parkinson
>Senior reporter - Mel Poluck
>Technical advisor - Nick Apostolidis
>Editorial advisor - Kevin Carey.
>
>ISSN 1476-6337 .
>
>[Issue ends.]
Regards Steve
Email: srp at internode.on.net
Skype: steve1963
MSN Messenger: internetuser383 at hotmail.com
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