Thank you for clicking, surfing, searching and/or otherwise stopping by Blind Net. These pages will provide you with USEFUL and FACTUAL information about blindness; general information as well as links to organizations OF the Blind, those organizations FOR the Blind that work with us, some of the companies that provide equipment we use, and other resources. Be sure to bookmark this page for future reference; you can do this in most browsers by pressing Control and D.
It should go without saying, but we'll say it anyway, that this is NOT a complete guide to sites on the Web. There are a number of reasons for this but the main one is the Web grows and changes so fast that keeping up is all but impossible. Also please remember a company or organization being listed here DOES NOT constitute an endorsement.
Every site on the web reflects the views of its creators and or sponsors. It is no different here at Blind Net. If you realize that blind people are normal human beings who simply can't see and that we can do most anything a sighted person can do, (we just use alternative techniques), then you'll almost certainly like what you find here. We DO NOT have, "THE RIGHT ANSWERS", what we do have is a positive philosophy about blindness and it's related issues.
This web site is divided into the following sections. The letters to the left of each item, for example [G] for General Information, are the access keys which some browsers can use to take you to the specified page.
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The Blind Net web site is Copyright © 1992, 2005, all rights reserved.
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These pages were coded using
the shareware copy of QEdit v3 for DOS.
This web site was built with 100% recycled materials.
No electrons were harmed in the construction of these pages.
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The Web Access Project is working to make the web easily accessible to
disabled people. This logo is displayed because this web site is designed to
be readable by people using screen readers and other computer access devices.
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This web site is fully accessible to people using screen readers.
There are no frames and tables are kept to a minimum.
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