ZoomText

ZoomText is a screen magnifier for Microsoft Windows, developed by Ai Squared which was acquired by Freedom Scientific in 2016. The first version was released for DOS in 1988, and the first version for Windows was released in 1991. ZoomText is available in two editions: ZoomText Magnifier and ZoomText Magnifier/Reader, which includes a built-in screen reader.

The latest version of ZoomText is ZoomText 2019 released by Freedom Scientific in November 2018.

Features

ZoomText is a stand-alone piece of software [1] designed for visually impaired people.[2] It is available for the currently released and supported versions of Microsoft Windows operating systems. The program allows you to see and hear everything on the computer screen [3] as well as providing access to applications, documents, email and the Internet.[4] The software can help individuals with ‘early vision loss, computer vision syndrome, and visual impairments such as macular degeneration and glaucoma’.[5] ZoomText has dual monitor support and is capable of magnifying the screen up to 60 times; it also allows you to choose which part of the screen is magnified. Text definition is maintained to preserve legibility. Color controls help improve the clarity of the screen and mouse pointers can be resized. It also provides enhanced navigation capabilities to help the user to launch programs and find documents on the desktop and find the hypertext links and controls on web pages, find words or phrases. In Windows Vista, magnification and screen reader support is enabled at the log on stage.[6]

History

ZoomText was produced and developed by AiSquared, which is based in Vermont, USA until 2016. Since then the development and testing was merged in with the team from Freedom Scientific who have provided JAWS since the 1990s. The product has been developed for over 25 years and is currently available in over 20 language versions.[7]

Release history

Version 11 was released in 2017

Version 2018 was released early 2018

Version 2019 was released in late 2018

Updates on current release version are now published between 4 and 6 weeks apart.

gollark: Assemblers can't check for them.
gollark: It's like C in that you can easily make mistakes, but more so.
gollark: For something written entirely in assembly it's surprisingly... not horribly broken seeming.
gollark: AsmBB is so vaguely ridiculous and funny that I'm feeling tempted to install it even though doing so is probably a bad idea.
gollark: C === 3 apioform.

See also

  • List of screen readers

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.