I still say, if you know such a member, forward them my example and ask! We
can all agree in the meantime that we know what a bunch of sighted folks here
think they *should* answer. :)
Just send the text block and say, Guess a letter.
If they guess X, you owe me a dollar.
Any other letter, I owe you a dollar.
tmn
--On Thursday, March 06, 2003 11:16 PM -0800 "Roger B.A. Klorese"
<rogerk@queernet.org> wrote:
> Tom Neff wrote:
>
>> --On Thursday, March 06, 2003 1:43 PM -0800 "Roger B.A. Klorese"
>> <rogerk@queernet.org> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>> [mailto:list-managers-owner@greatcircle.com] On Behalf Of Tom Neff
>>>> See if you can read this:
>>>>
>>>> .,.._...,_,..,,
>>>> _,X..,,_,,X,_,.
>>>> .,,X_,.,.X.,,..
>>>> .,..X,..X..._..
>>>> .,,,.X,X.+...,,
>>>> ,,,_.,X,_,.;.,.
>>>> .,,..X,X._._.,.
>>>> _,,.X,..X,,,.,,
>>>> _,,X.,,,.X,;.,,
>>>> .,X,._,..,X._,,
>>>> .,,,._.,.,...,.
>>>>
>>>>
>>> Yes, but members of our lists for blind glbt folk won't...
>>>
>>>
>>
>> How do you know? Pick one, send it and ask them.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
> They've complained about the technique before.
>
> How do you expect them to know what letter "dot comma dot dot underscore
> dot dot dot comma underscore comma dot dot comma comma, underscore comma x
> dot dot comma comma underscore comma comma x comma underscore comma dot"
> and so on represents? That's how it's read to them by the vocalization
> software, after all.
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