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The NVDA project (Non Visual Desktop Access) enables blind and vision impaired people to use a computer by communicating what is on the screen using a synthetic voice or braille. NVDA is the only ...
Queensland University of Technology (QUT) graduate James Teh and business partner Michael Curran developed a free, open-source program, called NVDA (NonVisual Desktop Access), which provides a ...
The pair created screen-reading software called NVDA (Non-Visual Desktop Access) when they were fresh out of university. Seventeen years later, it's now used by 275,000 people in 175 countries ...
Two blind computer programmers have developed a free, open-source program called NVDA (NonVisual Desktop Access), which ’reads’ the words on a computer screen as the cursor moves over them. The ...
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