This web site is now equipped with its own text-to-speech facility – so you can get the content read to you by an automated voice. This can be useful if you have problems seeing the text, but is also handy if you just want to listen to one of the longer items while getting on with something else.
You don’t have to download any software to get it to work. Simply click on the small yellow-and-green Listen icon near the headline of the item you are interested in. This will pop up a new window with the reader controls in it, should you you want to skip backwards or forwards. But the voice should start automatically with no further intervention after a few seconds.
If you prefer access keys to using a mouse, then access key L is the equivalent of clicking on the Listen icon. If there are multiple stories on the page the reader will start from the beginning of the item nearest your cursor position.
To stop reading simply close the reader’s pop-up window. Or click on another Listen icon to start it reading something different.
The technology PRIME is using comes from Readspeaker, a company founded in Sweden eight years ago. It now has many public sector and corporate clients in the UK. The Readspeaker approach is to keep the complicated technology on its own servers, so web site visitors don’t have to download anything.
This approach makes things very easy for the web site visitor. The downside to this is that all the decisions about how the reader works have been taken by the particular web site’s authors – in our case PRIME.
So for example we haven’t set it up to read all the navigation links, because for most people just wanting to hear a particular article that would be pretty tedious.
But if you find text-to-speech particularly valuable , perhaps because you are having sight problems, then there is another approach which can give you much greater control yourself. That is to install suitable software on your own machine. Some of this is free. You can read more about the options on the Accessibility page.
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