I'm blind, and I would really like an affordable handheld which was accessible. I think the Sharp Zaurus might be the answer. It has a keyboard, sound, and a processor capable of speech synthesis. I intend to get one and write software for it which speaks. I will of course make the software available to anyone else. If anyone is interested, contact rob _@_ mur.org.uk.
Sorry if I seam completely stupid, but what is the point? Why encrypt an mp3 just for it to be decrypted in the player? If the player has the key, and the user has the player, then the user has the key! I really don't understand how these mp3 encryption things are supposed to stop copying. If you can listen to it, then you can copy it. It only makes it more difficult to use, and loses customers, while not actually stopping people who are determined to copy music.
If you like Emacs, but like me hate the default key bindings, try ErgoEmacs. It is a set of Emacs key bindings which are not so painful.
I'm blind, and I would really like an affordable handheld which was
accessible. I think the Sharp Zaurus might be the answer. It has a
keyboard, sound, and a processor capable of speech synthesis. I intend
to get one and write software for it which speaks. I will of course
make the software available to anyone else. If anyone is interested,
contact rob _@_ mur.org.uk.
Sorry if I seam completely stupid, but what is the point? Why encrypt an mp3 just for it to be decrypted in the player? If the player has the key, and the user has the player, then the user has the key! I really don't understand how these mp3 encryption things are supposed to stop copying. If you can listen to it, then you can copy it. It only makes it more difficult to use, and loses customers, while not actually stopping people who are determined to copy music.