Preface: I work at CNIB, producing talking books in the Library. (Disclaimer: I do not speak for CNIB, yadda yadda.) I did spend a little time a few years ago working for the (sadly defunct) Tactile department. I may have met Lisa Murphy when she volunteered there. (Oh, and I'm sighted.) Here's the book's homepage, by the way.
bernockle: I can read Braille by sight, but only slowly. I suspect that an experienced braillist could sight read faster than an experienced braille reader could read by touch.
Hoser Bluenoser: Yeah, there's a lot of that. Partly it's leftover puritanism (or eugenics), partly it's a question of mandate (how many public libraries stock pornography?), partly it's a question of funding. Most organizations that produce accessible material are charities or non-profits, who would be worried about losing donations or funding if they create controversial material.
It's estimated that only 5% of everything published is available in an accessible format. We have limited resources to produce accessible material. So, we have to prioritize, based on what's popular, and what we can produce. This inevitably leads to censorship. Take the Left Behind books. They're extremely popular, but we can't produce talking books of them ourselves since our recording is done by volunteers and they don't want to read that crap. So we fob them off on Christian Blind Ministries, who have a hard time themselves finding volunteers because the books are so unchristian. But there is a demand for these books, and artificial factors stand in the way of getting them to people who want them. As well-intentioned we are, and as horrible as the books are, it's still censorship.
It's not total censorship; we do carry stuff like The Story of O and Harlequin romances. But, as a library, we tend to only have, well, library stuff. And we're the number one producer of accessible materials in Canada. We used to stock Playboy, but we don't any more (and yes, clients called in to request tactile images of that).
On your point more generally, yeah, sexuality is denied to many people with disabilities. I was in a play last year about a quadriplegic woman (a real person) who's in her 50s and has never had a lover. And other options just aren't available to her. It's only fairly recently that sex aides for disabled people have been on the market.
Blue Horse: It's not actually papery. Thermoform is another name for vacuum-formed plastic. It's an inferior tactile experience to paper, but it's impossible to make a paper tactile image that you can duplicate, has a decent level of detail, and doesn't deteriorate rapidly.
$225 for 17 pictures. That's actually reasonable---tactile is expensive. However, there's not many who can actually afford this, as disability and poverty are correlated.
MCJOB: A low-pay, low-prestige, low-dignity, low-benefit, no-future job in the service sector. Frequently considered a satisfying career choice by people who have never held one.
—Douglas Coupland, Generation X, 1991, p. 5 (sidebar).
I think I heard McJob well before I'd heard Joe job, though, despite living in Toronto. McMansions is a first for me, too, but I knew what it meant right away.
Hey, Dreadnought, can I have your table, then? Living in T.O., of course, I won't be able to talk at it, but maybe I can injure people by tagging them with it.
The first picture looks like a double shadow transit--the shadows of two of Jupiter's moons on the planet. I pulled out Celestia, and ran the time back to 1880-11-01 21:30, and it looks like the spot on the left is Io's shadow and the spot on the right is Europa's. Io and Europa themselves are the light dots on the left side of the shadows.
(The next double shadow transit is this Monday at 5:08 AM UTC. Io and Europa.)
Also, ))).
I recently bought a new pair of Levi's ``Relaxed Fit'' men's jeans. The tag says 99% cotton, 1% Spandex. So, yeah, they make stretchy guy pants, too. (Also, the most comfortable pair of trousers I've ever worn.)
Vertex, I hear you. I wore a kilt to a Monkey wedding last year. It just beat the pants off ... pants.
planet, Chy: Sounds to me like it was the original track, with the left or right channel flipped upside-down for Tom Baker's bits. You can tell by the way the stereo goes crazy wide when he's, uh, singing. I used to have some music software that called that `Surround Sound'.
(It also gets a lot more crackly and MP3-artifacty, possibly from the fact that the left and right channels are no longer positively correlated. That's just a guess, though; I deal mostly in mono MP3.)
Preface: I work at CNIB, producing talking books in the Library. (Disclaimer: I do not speak for CNIB, yadda yadda.) I did spend a little time a few years ago working for the (sadly defunct) Tactile department. I may have met Lisa Murphy when she volunteered there. (Oh, and I'm sighted.) Here's the book's homepage, by the way. bernockle: I can read Braille by sight, but only slowly. I suspect that an experienced braillist could sight read faster than an experienced braille reader could read by touch. Hoser Bluenoser: Yeah, there's a lot of that. Partly it's leftover puritanism (or eugenics), partly it's a question of mandate (how many public libraries stock pornography?), partly it's a question of funding. Most organizations that produce accessible material are charities or non-profits, who would be worried about losing donations or funding if they create controversial material. It's estimated that only 5% of everything published is available in an accessible format. We have limited resources to produce accessible material. So, we have to prioritize, based on what's popular, and what we can produce. This inevitably leads to censorship. Take the Left Behind books. They're extremely popular, but we can't produce talking books of them ourselves since our recording is done by volunteers and they don't want to read that crap. So we fob them off on Christian Blind Ministries, who have a hard time themselves finding volunteers because the books are so unchristian. But there is a demand for these books, and artificial factors stand in the way of getting them to people who want them. As well-intentioned we are, and as horrible as the books are, it's still censorship. It's not total censorship; we do carry stuff like The Story of O and Harlequin romances. But, as a library, we tend to only have, well, library stuff. And we're the number one producer of accessible materials in Canada. We used to stock Playboy, but we don't any more (and yes, clients called in to request tactile images of that). On your point more generally, yeah, sexuality is denied to many people with disabilities. I was in a play last year about a quadriplegic woman (a real person) who's in her 50s and has never had a lover. And other options just aren't available to her. It's only fairly recently that sex aides for disabled people have been on the market. Blue Horse: It's not actually papery. Thermoform is another name for vacuum-formed plastic. It's an inferior tactile experience to paper, but it's impossible to make a paper tactile image that you can duplicate, has a decent level of detail, and doesn't deteriorate rapidly. $225 for 17 pictures. That's actually reasonable---tactile is expensive. However, there's not many who can actually afford this, as disability and poverty are correlated.
posted by allusion 14 years ago
In "50 Strange Buildings of the World. "
I like to pretend it doesn't exist. Ditto U of T's Grad House.
posted by allusion 15 years ago
Some local examples: Toronto City Hall Holy Ukrainian Catholic Church (and self-link) House on Coxwell Ave. Bata Shoe Museum And I found another collection of strange houses.
posted by allusion 15 years ago
In "Dan Aykroyd would like you to try this vodka in a crystal skull."
*snrk* Okay, he had me up until Newfoundland.
posted by allusion 16 years ago
In "The Internationale"
I found the Tagalog version a while ago on another site; it's pretty awesome in a peppy sort of way.
posted by allusion 16 years ago
In "Worst Album Covers EVAR "
Nickdanger, just one of the tracks is available, to my knowledge, courtesy of the 365 Days Project: Ali's Historical Theme Song "Who rode the ride of Paul Revere? ALI!"
posted by allusion 16 years ago
In "McDonald's lobbies the O.E.D. to redefine 'McJob'."
I do have a copy of it on my shelf.
—Douglas Coupland, Generation X, 1991, p. 5 (sidebar). I think I heard McJob well before I'd heard Joe job, though, despite living in Toronto. McMansions is a first for me, too, but I knew what it meant right away.posted by allusion 17 years ago
In "Robert Anton Wilson has died."
I just checked his blog a few days ago to see how he was doing, too. .
posted by allusion 17 years ago
In "U.S. school bans tag"
Hey, Dreadnought, can I have your table, then? Living in T.O., of course, I won't be able to talk at it, but maybe I can injure people by tagging them with it.
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "NewsFilter: Montreal Shootings."
. I was in Montréal just last week.
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "The Illustrations of Étienne Léopold Trouvelot."
The first picture looks like a double shadow transit--the shadows of two of Jupiter's moons on the planet. I pulled out Celestia, and ran the time back to 1880-11-01 21:30, and it looks like the spot on the left is Io's shadow and the spot on the right is Europa's. Io and Europa themselves are the light dots on the left side of the shadows. (The next double shadow transit is this Monday at 5:08 AM UTC. Io and Europa.) Also, ))).
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "Keen of trimly"
webuser: Toronto Transit Commission sternest: Mass contortionist tin room. [An as ban.]
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "Pictures to confuse your soul and make you go pee pee in your pants."
Woah. It's extra-surreal (hypersurreal?) for me, since a lot of the buildings are based off ones in my hometown. Casa Loma, Commerce Court North, the Canada Life building, the Royal York Hotel, and just general Romanesque. The toy train set is painted up like old TTC streetcars.
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "Batwoman switches teams."
I always suspected something.
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In ""Fashioncore""
I recently bought a new pair of Levi's ``Relaxed Fit'' men's jeans. The tag says 99% cotton, 1% Spandex. So, yeah, they make stretchy guy pants, too. (Also, the most comfortable pair of trousers I've ever worn.) Vertex, I hear you. I wore a kilt to a Monkey wedding last year. It just beat the pants off ... pants.
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "Tom Baker Says..."
Also, more Tom Baker swearing in a furniture commercial. (via)
posted by allusion 18 years ago
planet, Chy: Sounds to me like it was the original track, with the left or right channel flipped upside-down for Tom Baker's bits. You can tell by the way the stereo goes crazy wide when he's, uh, singing. I used to have some music software that called that `Surround Sound'. (It also gets a lot more crackly and MP3-artifacty, possibly from the fact that the left and right channels are no longer positively correlated. That's just a guess, though; I deal mostly in mono MP3.)
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "Before there were dashboard CD players"
Nifty. There's a 16 RPM talking book machine at work, but I didn't know it was a standard speed outside of talking books.
posted by allusion 18 years ago
In "ROBOKITTY!"
ROBOKITTY?
posted by allusion 19 years ago
In "The anti-porn."
``Highlights the face, rather than the body....'' Yeah. 'Cause you know that judging people by their looks is only O.K. if it's their faces.
posted by allusion 19 years ago
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