STOCKHOLM and OSLO, Norway -- Major telecommunications companies pick up
technology originally developed for deaf people's communication.
Telecommunication features of essential value for deaf, hard-of-hearing,
deaf-blind and speech-impaired people have been incorporated in a recently
approved mainstream standard for 3G and Next Generation Networks.
"This is a big step towards the goal to make mainstream telecommunications
useable for all", says Gunnar Hellström, CEO at the accessible information
technology company Omnitor, and original author of the standard for
real-time text communication now picked up as one medium in the 3G
Multimedia Telephony specification approved by the international 3G
standardisation organisation 3GPP.
The new 3G standard includes real-time communication in both video,
real-time text and voice, and is a great promise for disabled people, who
often experience that mainstream communication leaves the features they need
behind. Good smooth video for sign language and real-time text with
immediate flow as typed are features of great importance for all telecom
users who have limited or no use of voice telephony.
"I am sure that these media will prove to be popular among all users", says
Gunnar. Already, Instant Messaging with its slower sentence-wise
communication style has become popular, so that is a good indication when
text services now can be enhanced by using real-time text with more lively
flow of the conversation. Usability evaluations show that it matches the
modern style of immediate communication required by the young generation.
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