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- KANSYS, Inc.
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- Located in Lawrence, Kansas, and founded in 1976, KANSYS,
- Inc. develops computer products and provides computer-based
- services of value to the blind. Its principal products are
- PROVOX, a screen access program for desktop PC systems; and
- TurboBraille, an easy-to-use and powerful program to translate
- source documents into standard literary English braille. Services
- offered by KANSYS, Inc. include the production of braille menus,
- newsletters, conference agendas, telemarketing prospect lists,
- and similar materials.
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- Dr. Charles Hallenbeck, president and founder of KANSYS,
- Inc. has received formal training both in rehabilitation and in
- computer science. With many years of personal experience in the
- alternative techniques of blindness, Dr. Hallenbeck has worked
- actively in the joint areas of rehabilitation and computing since
- the 1960's. The company was established as a Kansas corporation
- to facilitate sharing with others the solutions to blindness
- which had been devised or refined throughout his varied
- professional career. University based grants for research on
- computer tactography and synthesized-message/synthesized-speech
- information access techniques for the blind formed the scientific
- background for products of KANSYS, Inc.
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- Following a year of advanced training at Carnegie-Mellon
- University in 1976-1977, Dr. Hallenbeck developed one of the
- first talking terminal devices based on the 1977 Digital Group
- "hobby computer," an early innovative design which did not
- survive the early competition. That project culminated in speech
- access to the CP/M operating environment in the early 1980's, and
- to MS-DOS thereafter. The KANSYS, Inc. solution to computer
- access by speech is known as PROVOX, and is used effectively by
- several hundred blind individuals at home, in schools, and on the
- job, throughout the country and in several foreign countries.
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- TurboBraille has been available from KANSYS, Inc. only since
- 1989, but has extensive roots in earlier work by Dr. Hallenbeck
- and others. Writing software to produce computer braille was the
- focus of Dr. Hallenbeck's Special Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the
- Washington University Department of Applied Mathematics and
- Computer Science from 1967 to 1969, and has continued to receive
- attention since that time. The first braille embosser for
- personal computers was introduced in 1983, and within a few
- weeks, KANSYS, Inc. had produced a CP/M program in the "C"
- language to translate documents into the required codes to
- operate the device. The increased power and standardization of
- the IBM PC became available soon after, and the newly developed
- software made the transition and supported the production efforts
- mentioned earlier. Finally, a commercial version was offered
- under the name TurboBraille beginning in 1989, and that product
- currently enjoys considerable success and popularity.
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