ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ron McCallum - Labor lawyer and activist
Blind almost since birth, Ron McCallum is one of Australia's most respected legal scholars, and an activist on behalf of disabled people around the globe.

Why you should listen

Ron McCallum AO is one of Australia's most respected industrial and discrimination lawyers and a prominent human rights advocate. With a long career as a legal academic and teacher, in 1993 he became the first totally blind person appointed to a full professorship at any Australian university when he became Professor in Industrial Law at the University of Sydney. He served as Dean of the University of Sydney Law School for five years and is now an emeritus professor. McCallum is a leading light in the disabled community, working for equality among all Australians. He is also chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Read TEDxSydney's Q&A with Ron McCallum >>

More profile about the speaker
Ron McCallum | Speaker | TED.com
TEDxSydney

Ron McCallum: How technology allowed me to read

Filmed:
719,205 views

Months after he was born, in 1948, Ron McCallum became blind. In this charming, moving talk, he shows how he reads -- and celebrates the progression of clever tools and adaptive computer technologies that make it possible. With their help, and the help of volunteers, he's become a lawyer, an academic, and, most of all, a voracious reader. Welcome to the blind reading revolution.
- Labor lawyer and activist
Blind almost since birth, Ron McCallum is one of Australia's most respected legal scholars, and an activist on behalf of disabled people around the globe. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:12
When I was about three or four years old,
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I remember my mum reading a story to me
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and my two big brothers,
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and I remember putting up my hands
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to feel the page of the book,
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to feel the picture they were discussing.
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And my mum said, "Darling,
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remember that you can't see
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and you can't feel the picture
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and you can't feel the print on the page."
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And I thought to myself,
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"But that's what I want to do.
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I love stories. I want to read."
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Little did I know
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that I would be part of a technological revolution
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that would make that dream come true.
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I was born premature by about 10 weeks,
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which resulted in my blindness, some 64 years ago.
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The condition is known as retrolental fibroplasia,
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and it's now very rare in the developed world.
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Little did I know, lying curled up
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in my prim baby humidicrib in 1948
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that I'd been born at the right place
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and the right time,
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that I was in a country where I could participate
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in the technological revolution.
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There are 37 million totally blind people on our planet,
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but those of us who've shared in the technological changes
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mainly come from North America, Europe,
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Japan and other developed parts of the world.
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Computers have changed the lives of us all in this room
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and around the world,
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but I think they've changed the lives
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of we blind people more than any other group.
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And so I want to tell you about the interaction
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between computer-based adaptive technology
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and the many volunteers who helped me over the years
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to become the person I am today.
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It's an interaction between volunteers,
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passionate inventors and technology,
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and it's a story that many other blind people could tell.
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But let me tell you a bit about it today.
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When I was five, I went to school and I learned braille.
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It's an ingenious system of six dots
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that are punched into paper,
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and I can feel them with my fingers.
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In fact, I think they're putting up my grade six report.
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I don't know where Julian Morrow got that from.
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(Laughter)
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I was pretty good in reading,
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but religion and musical appreciation needed more work.
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(Laughter)
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When you leave the opera house,
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you'll find there's braille signage in the lifts.
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Look for it. Have you noticed it?
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I do. I look for it all the time.
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(Laughter)
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When I was at school,
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the books were transcribed by transcribers,
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voluntary people who punched one dot at a time
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so I'd have volumes to read,
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and that had been going on, mainly by women,
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since the late 19th century in this country,
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but it was the only way I could read.
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When I was in high school,
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I got my first Philips reel-to-reel tape recorder,
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and tape recorders became my sort of pre-computer
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medium of learning.
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I could have family and friends read me material,
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and I could then read it back
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as many times as I needed.
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And it brought me into contact
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with volunteers and helpers.
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For example, when I studied at graduate school
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at Queen's University in Canada,
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the prisoners at the Collins Bay jail agreed to help me.
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I gave them a tape recorder, and they read into it.
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As one of them said to me,
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"Ron, we ain't going anywhere at the moment."
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(Laughter)
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But think of it. These men,
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who hadn't had the educational opportunities I'd had,
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helped me gain post-graduate qualifications in law
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by their dedicated help.
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Well, I went back and became an academic
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at Melbourne's Monash University,
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and for those 25 years,
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tape recorders were everything to me.
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In fact, in my office in 1990,
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I had 18 miles of tape.
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Students, family and friends all read me material.
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Mrs. Lois Doery,
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whom I later came to call my surrogate mum,
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read me many thousands of hours onto tape.
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One of the reasons I agreed to give this talk today
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was that I was hoping that Lois would be here
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so I could introduce you to her and publicly thank her.
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But sadly, her health hasn't permitted her to come today.
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But I thank you here, Lois, from this platform.
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(Applause)
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I saw my first Apple computer in 1984,
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and I thought to myself,
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"This thing's got a glass screen, not much use to me."
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How very wrong I was.
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In 1987, in the month our eldest son Gerard was born,
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I got my first blind computer,
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and it's actually here.
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See it up there?
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And you see it has no, what do you call it, no screen.
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(Laughter)
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It's a blind computer.
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(Laughter)
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It's a Keynote Gold 84k,
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and the 84k stands for it had 84 kilobytes of memory.
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(Laughter)
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Don't laugh, it cost me 4,000 dollars at the time. (Laughter)
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I think there's more memory in my watch.
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It was invented by Russell Smith, a passionate inventor
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in New Zealand who was trying to help blind people.
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Sadly, he died in a light plane crash in 2005,
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but his memory lives on in my heart.
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It meant, for the first time,
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I could read back what I had typed into it.
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It had a speech synthesizer.
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I'd written my first coauthored labor law book
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on a typewriter in 1979 purely from memory.
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This now allowed me to read back what I'd written
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and to enter the computer world,
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even with its 84k of memory.
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In 1974, the great Ray Kurzweil, the American inventor,
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worked on building a machine that would scan books
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and read them out in synthetic speech.
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Optical character recognition units then
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only operated usually on one font,
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but by using charge-coupled device flatbed scanners
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and speech synthesizers,
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he developed a machine that could read any font.
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And his machine, which was as big as a washing machine,
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was launched on the 13th of January, 1976.
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I saw my first commercially available Kurzweil
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in March 1989, and it blew me away,
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and in September 1989,
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the month that my associate professorship
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at Monash University was announced,
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the law school got one, and I could use it.
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For the first time, I could read what I wanted to read
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by putting a book on the scanner.
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I didn't have to be nice to people!
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(Laughter)
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I no longer would be censored.
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For example, I was too shy then,
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and I'm actually too shy now, to ask anybody
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to read me out loud sexually explicit material.
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(Laughter)
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But, you know, I could pop a book on in the middle of the night, and --
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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Now, the Kurzweil reader is simply
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a program on my laptop.
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That's what it's shrunk to.
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And now I can scan the latest novel
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and not wait to get it into talking book libraries.
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I can keep up with my friends.
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There are many people who have helped me in my life,
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and many that I haven't met.
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One is another American inventor Ted Henter.
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Ted was a motorcycle racer,
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but in 1978 he had a car accident and lost his sight,
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which is devastating if you're trying to ride motorbikes.
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He then turned to being a waterskier
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and was a champion disabled waterskier.
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But in 1989, he teamed up with Bill Joyce
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to develop a program that would read out
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what was on the computer screen
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from the Net or from what was on the computer.
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It's called JAWS, Job Access With Speech,
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and it sounds like this.
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(JAWS speaking)
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Ron McCallum: Isn't that slow?
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(Laughter)
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You see, if I read like that, I'd fall asleep.
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I slowed it down for you.
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I'm going to ask that we play it at the speed I read it.
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Can we play that one?
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(JAWS speaking)
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(Laughter)
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RM: You know, when you're marking student essays,
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you want to get through them fairly quickly.
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(Laughter) (Applause)
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This technology that fascinated me in 1987
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is now on my iPhone and on yours as well.
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But, you know, I find reading with machines
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a very lonely process.
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I grew up with family, friends, reading to me,
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and I loved the warmth and the breath
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and the closeness of people reading.
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Do you love being read to?
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And one of my most enduring memories
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is in 1999, Mary reading to me and the children
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down near Manly Beach
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"Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone."
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Isn't that a great book?
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I still love being close to someone reading to me.
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But I wouldn't give up the technology,
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because it's allowed me to lead a great life.
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Of course, talking books for the blind
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predated all this technology.
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After all, the long-playing record was developed
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in the early 1930s,
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and now we put talking books on CDs
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using the digital access system known as DAISY.
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But when I'm reading with synthetic voices,
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I love to come home and read a racy novel
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with a real voice.
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Now there are still barriers
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in front of we people with disabilities.
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Many websites we can't read using JAWS
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and the other technologies.
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Websites are often very visual,
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and there are all these sorts of graphs
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that aren't labeled and buttons that aren't labeled,
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and that's why the World Wide Web Consortium 3,
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known as W3C, has developed worldwide standards
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for the Internet.
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And we want all Internet users or Internet site owners
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to make their sites compatible so that
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we persons without vision can have a level playing field.
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There are other barriers brought about by our laws.
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For example, Australia,
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like about one third of the world's countries,
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has copyright exceptions which allow books to be brailled
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or read for we blind persons.
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But those books can't travel across borders.
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For example, in Spain, there are a 100,000
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accessible books in Spanish.
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In Argentina, there are 50,000.
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In no other Latin American country
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are there more than a couple of thousand.
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But it's not legal to transport the books
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from Spain to Latin America.
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There are hundreds of thousands of accessible books
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in the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia, etc.,
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but they can't be transported to the 60 countries
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in our world where English is the first and the second language.
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And remember I was telling you about Harry Potter.
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Well, because we can't transport books across borders,
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there had to be separate versions read
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in all the different English-speaking countries:
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Britain, United States, Canada, Australia,
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and New Zealand all had to have
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separate readings of Harry Potter.
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And that's why, next month in Morocco,
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a meeting is taking place between all the countries.
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It's something that a group of countries
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and the World Blind Union are advocating,
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a cross-border treaty
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so that if books are available under a copyright exception
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and the other country has a copyright exception,
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we can transport those books across borders
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and give life to people, particularly in developing countries,
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blind people who don't have the books to read.
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I want that to happen.
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(Applause)
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My life has been extraordinarily blessed
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with marriage and children
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and certainly interesting work to do,
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whether it be at the University of Sydney Law School,
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where I served a term as dean,
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or now as I sit on the United Nations Committee
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on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, in Geneva.
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I've indeed been a very fortunate human being.
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I wonder what the future will hold.
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The technology will advance even further,
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but I can still remember my mum saying, 60 years ago,
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"Remember, darling,
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you'll never be able to read the print with your fingers."
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I'm so glad that the interaction between braille transcribers,
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volunteer readers and passionate inventors,
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has allowed this dream of reading to come true for me
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and for blind people throughout the world.
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I'd like to thank my researcher Hannah Martin,
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who is my slide clicker, who clicks the slides,
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and my wife, Professor Mary Crock, who's the light of my life,
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is coming on to collect me.
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I want to thank her too.
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15:11
I think I have to say goodbye now.
284
899432
2000
15:13
Bless you. Thank you very much.
285
901432
1571
15:15
(Applause)
286
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1724
15:16
Yay! (Applause)
287
904727
9238
15:32
Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. (Applause)
288
920602
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ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Ron McCallum - Labor lawyer and activist
Blind almost since birth, Ron McCallum is one of Australia's most respected legal scholars, and an activist on behalf of disabled people around the globe.

Why you should listen

Ron McCallum AO is one of Australia's most respected industrial and discrimination lawyers and a prominent human rights advocate. With a long career as a legal academic and teacher, in 1993 he became the first totally blind person appointed to a full professorship at any Australian university when he became Professor in Industrial Law at the University of Sydney. He served as Dean of the University of Sydney Law School for five years and is now an emeritus professor. McCallum is a leading light in the disabled community, working for equality among all Australians. He is also chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities.

Read TEDxSydney's Q&A with Ron McCallum >>

More profile about the speaker
Ron McCallum | Speaker | TED.com

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