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It's almost past the holiday season and I hope you've had one that you were dreaming of all year. I realized, I haven't ever repeated my advent calendar event which many of you seemed to have liked. That does not mean I have stopped researching good practice examples of accessibility implementations around the world. As a way of making up for it, I wanted to share a story that I digged up by following a thread of references from a podcast I was listening to, through somebody's personal website like it was done 30 years ago, through an anonymous FTP to the main site of the Braillnet project. I found the story really inspiring. It's 1993 in then Czechoslovakia. and the Internet is slowly becoming a thing alongside some, often locally produced, ways of making DOS and Windows 95 PC’s talk, at least with the most common software. It is apparent to the employees of the local blindness organization that the net will be a game-changer in access to information for blind and partially sighted users, some of whom own notetakers like the Eureka or even PCs. By cooperating with the IT centre of a university they set up a BBS under a phone number in Prague and offer, for the first time, access to digitalized books and magazines, an e-mail account, a Telnet and FTP client. Public transport schedules might have been a thing too but I'm not 100% sure about that. The network develops but the limitations are apparent: access mostly to internal information and only through a number in one city. Four years later, an idea is born to give all persons with disabilities access to regular, dial-up internet with prominence of locally sourced material but not excluding the entire world wide web. They manage to secure state funds and support of local ISP's and set up numbers for all major numerical zones in already then Czech Republic, giving unlimited access to the Internet to any person with a disability for the fixed price of around 4 USD per month. #Accessibility #RetroTech #Blind
in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

The Braillnet project exists to this day, although the BBS and phone numbers are down, users can still access their e-mail, the personal websites the users could create under the Braillnet domain are still up serving software, literature and music created by the community and the FTP with anonymous access is a treasure trove of early notetaker goodies, DOS and early Windows software and useful information in txt files that would have been of great use to the community back then. Always worth exploring it with a translation service of your choice. braillnet.cz/sons/bplus.htm

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in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

Thanks for everything you do, seriously. Just so you know, the Braillnet project is still pretty well known in Czechia these days, mostly because a lot of blind people here still use their mailing lists pretty actively :)

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in reply to Tissman

@Tissman Thank you for the kind words and the follow up information. Yes, I'm subscribed to a couple but haven't got much time to browse them these days. Keep rocking it. Diky moc!
in reply to Tissman

@Tissman and, thanks to this and these mailing lists i have got the feedback regarding the Czech language for RHVoice.
in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

@Paweł Masarczyk Just out of interest I have started with my computers jjourney a few years later approx in 1998 and at that time BBS has already been transformed into an FTP site I think.
Some university students tried to rip it off and burned it to multiple DVD discs they were then able to use as a gift for other people who have no internet access at that time.

Paweł Masarczyk reshared this.

in reply to Peter Vágner

@pvagner Do you know what else was offered by the BBS? I mean, beyond e-mail, FTP and Telnet, were there any extra services running over there?
in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

@Paweł Masarczyk I don't know really. I had no computer access on my own at that time. I'll try asking some friends that I believe might know and will reply back later.