Lazy K,
Let us know how the search goes. I KNOW there has to be more accessibility resources from IBM. I know the site I gave you is a good starting point. If she needs more info and I'll go searching.
What is wierd about this TBN thread and a couple of others this week is that I would answer a question, well attempt to /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif, submit the note to TBN, and someone would walk in and start talking about a very similar situation. A guy walked in after I submitted the accessiblity web site info and started talking about a women who has Carpel Tunnel and has a tough time typing. She has some equipment to help her type as well as voice recognition software to help her navigate.
Your friend might want to try some of the voice recognition software, IBM has a product that might be downloadable and I think Dragon(sp) has a well thought of product as well.
I suspect she does not have a problem getting info INTO the computer just OUT.
As an aside, one of my first relevations about how different/powerful email/newsgroups/forums can be happend in the mid 80's. IBM has had for decades an internal forum system similiar to Internet Newsgroups but prior to the Internet. At least the general public Internet. Websites like TBN are an evolution of the Forums/Newsgroups. The IBM forums covered, and still do, technical issues and can be a great resource. One of the people who ran some of the forums and I think the overall system in general was blind. I did not know that for many years. You would see his name all over the place answering questions. One day as part of the conversation he mentioned that he was blind.
Now here was someone who I "knew" but I never had a clue about him being blind. But then how could I? It kinda hit me that you might know someone's gender when communicating in this media but that was about it. Everything else you knew about the person was from what they wrote, which might tell you of their personality, but of their physicallity you knew nothing. You did not know if the person tall, short, weak, strong, or most important of all, Green, Blue, or Orange! /w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
It really impressed me that the computer systems were allowing someone with a handicap that limits them in many ways, most especially with the computer systems of 15 years ago, but he was still able to function at such a high level, to be so productive and important yet you would not have a clue the guy was blind. It really made me appreciate what computer systems can do for people.
Later...
Dan McCarty