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"Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny. "
On a similar topic, I watched a program last night about a guy with no arms, who had become a fully trained carpenter using his feet to hold and use the tools.
The only problem now is that he can't get a job as health and saftey dictates he has to wear steel toe capped boots when on a building site, which leaves him buggered!
If at first you don't succeed... skydiving is not for you!
blooming heck.
I guess all your communications would have to be by email.
I suppose you wouldnt have to worry about singing out loud tunelessly when you have your earplugs in though
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(>'.'<)
("")("") Born to Drink. Forced to Work
"Experience hath shewn, that even under the best forms of government those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny. "
I have never met a deaf contractor. Does such a beastie exist ? Is it possible to do the biz in IT if you are deaf ??
just wondering
Provided the client is happy to communicate via email rather than spoken conversation (and this is presuming the deaf person is unable to lip read), I can't see why a deaf contractor would be any less useful to a client than a non-deaf person would be, at least in the IT arena. Just can't say I've ever met one.
In the past I have worked with 2 blind coders, both absolutely tulip hot. When I was an op we used to do a special print run (on an impact printer) using the braille chain to print off program listings for one. He used a scanning device to translate what was on the screen into braille (this was circa 1980).
The other chap (now a senior manager) had a guide dog which sat under his desk all day. He had some software which magnified the characters on his screen to massive size, and on a 21" monitor he could read a short word.
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