Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sun-barr!olivea!oliveb!bunker!wtm From: DDZ@PSUVM.PSU.EDU (Carolyn Dudas) Newsgroups: misc.handicap Subject: Windows Accessibility Message-ID: <15886@bunker.UUCP> Date: 27 Nov 90 20:47:43 GMT Sender: wtm@bunker.UUCP Reply-To: DDZ@PSUVM.PSU.EDU (Carolyn Dudas) Distribution: misc Organization: Penn State University Lines: 28 Approved: wtm@bunker.UUCP Index Number: 11978 The following article appeared in PC Week (October 29, 1990, p.48): [Reprinted from PC Week, October 29, 1990 with permission Copyright (c) 1990 Ziff Communications Company] "MICROSOFT EASES WINDOWS ACCESS FOR DISABLED In an effort to give users with physical disabilities fuller access to computers, Microsoft Corp. recently released a device driver that makes Windows programs easier for these users to control. The driver, developed by Trace Research and Development Center at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, is designed to help users with impaired manual dexterity. It creates 'sticky' Alt, Ctrl and Shift keys that do not have to be held down, desensitizes the keyboard and lets the number keypad function as a mouse. To make it easier to employ people with disabilities, Microsoft recommends installing the driver on all shared PCs. 'Install these on any machine, and a user without disabilities can use it without realizing anything is different,' said Greg Lowney, program manager for Windows at Microsoft in Redmond, Wash. 'Then, if a user with a disability comes up to the machine, they can activate special support by themselves.' The driver is part of the Windows Supplemental Driver Library, available free on bulletin boards or for $20 by calling Microsoft at (800) 426-9400."