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For the deaf: real instant messaging...and maybe for everybody else as well
Telecommunications
For the deaf: real instant messaging...and maybe for everybody else as well | For the deaf: real instant messaging...and maybe for everybody else as well |
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| by Stuart Corner | |
| Tuesday, 05 August 2008 | |
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Page 1 of 2 The goal of R3TF is "to ensure that real-time text is as readily available for all users as voice is." It promises to "create and maintain a roadmap that will provide the basis for the full deployment, seamless inter-operability and the future development and evolution of Real-Time Text as a mainstream feature/service." The Framework was co-authored by Arnoud van Wijk, disability projects coordinator for ISOC, who was born deaf, and Guido Gybels, director of New Technologies at RNID (UK with contributions from other experts in communication and accessibility for people with disabilities. The Roadmap will aim to identify one mainstream real-time text standard at its core with methods to interconnect with other real-time text systems. According to R3TF "having a single real-time text standard that is used everywhere would make accessibility to the communication service very easy and would eliminate interworking issues. However, with the different characteristics of communication networks and devices in use today, this is not possible. "A real-time text standard that most terminals and networks can either use native or easily interconnect via gateways between different network borders will make the aim of real-time text that can be used everywhere possible," it says. "This will also encourage the implementation, development, evolution and support of one real-time text standard on future (communication) networks." CONTINUED |
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