Saturday, January 20, 2007
Internet Cafe Opens for Disabled Users
Internet Cafe Opens for Disabled Users
By MICHELLE ROBERTS
The Associated Press
Friday, December 15, 2006; 4:07 PM
SAN ANTONIO -- The Good Bytes Cafe has stained concrete floors, jars of scones and a small bank of computers in the corner, making it much like any Internet cafe.
But the computers _ outfitted with a joystick mouse, magnifying software and equipment allowing people to point and click with their eye movements _ make Good Bytes one of just a handful nationwide specifically designed for disabled users.
The cafe, which held its grand opening Friday, is a first for Goodwill Industries, the nonprofit best known for selling used clothing and furniture at its thrift stores nationwide.
"We're the first, but we won't be the last," said Rebecca Helterbrand, marketing vice president for Goodwill Industries of San Antonio.
Goodwill has long had job centers around San Antonio to help disabled residents find work, but surveys found that 70 percent of the area's disabled are unemployed and 60 percent don't have computer skills, she said.
Because of the correlation between joblessness and lack of computer skills, Goodwill wanted to build something that would give more disabled people access to assistive technology. The nonprofit also wanted to do it in a setting as likely to be filled with nearby office workers and tourists as the disabled, Helterbrand said.
The cafe, funded with a $125,000 grant from San Antonio-based AT&T Inc., will be supported by food sales and will double as a location to train disabled food service workers, she said.
Typically, disabled users who need special technology or equipment to operate computers or surf the Web must pay for it themselves, said William Gribbons, a professor of human factors in information design at Bentley College outside of Boston.
"There is some incredible stuff out there, but unfortunately, it's expensive," he said.
Some of the technology, like software that magnifies and reads aloud to help those who are visually impaired, is cheaper, because of a large market of aging computer users. But technology that can aid rarer disabilities can be considerably more expensive.
"It tends to be concentrated with the 'haves,'" Gribbons said.The Good Bytes Cafe does not charge for access to the technology.
Two computers are outfitted with magnifying and reading software. Another PC allows users with no physical mobility to control a mouse with the movement of their eyes. The mouse follows their gaze and clicks when they blink.
Saturday, January 06, 2007
Malaysia: Need Muscle power to acquire licences for Cyber Cafes
The rumours are that the attack had something to do with the "issuance, rejection and cancellation" of cyber cafe and video game centre licences. Prior to the incident, Dr Nasruddin had revoked the licences of eight cyber cafes and four video game centres which had breached the licensing regulations.
Days before the attack, there were at least 30 cyber cafe applications awaiting his processing, 60 cyber cafes and 59 video game outlets in Klang.
India: Orkut banned in small city cyber cafes
Times of India reports :
The ORKUT website has been in the eye of a storm over the past two months, after two public interest litigations were filed against it in Aurangabad and Mumbai for derogatory references to Maratha warrior king Chhatrapati Shivaji. State legislature at Nagpur, Shiv Sena MLC Arvind Sawant had demanded that the site be banned for 'obscene posts against Hindu women on the website'. Since then, fearing legal hassles, cyber cafe owners have asked their customers to refrain from logging on to orkut.com .
While rumors are the city police has issued a notice calling for a ban of the web site . None of the city cafe operators have received such a notice .
Taiwan : cyber Palaces replace Internet Cafes
Cyber palaces replace Internet cafes
Despite government regulations and negative media coverage, some of Taipei's Internet cafes are working to provide more state-of-the-art services for customers
Taipei Times
Friday, January 5, 2007
By Ron Brownlow
If you had asked someone six years ago what Taiwan's Internet cafe of today would look like, that person might have described something like Ha2 in Shilin, near Taipei's Jiantan MRT station. Located beneath a winding staircase on a street that's often crowded with high school students, H2 is as sleek as a nightclub and as comfortable as the lobby of a five-star hotel. Effortlessly filling its 920m2 spread are 180 high-powered computers, soft white sofas and a conference room straight out of a James Bond movie.
Where competitors smell like airport smoking lounges and serve ramen noodles and instant coffee, H2 has a state-of-the-art ventilation system, a walk-in cooler, and a menu that lists pizza and fried chicken. Customers here for relaxation can read comic books at four-person pods with flat-panel monitors that swivel on mechanical arms, or pair off in cubicles with adjustable, wood-finish desks. Those on business get projector screens and a conference table with a partition that raises via remote control to reveal personal workstations. Set well apart from these areas are rows and rows of brand-new dual-processor PCs, where scores of young men battle day and night with keyboard and mouse on the latest online games.
Among the hundreds of Internet cafes that existed in Taipei six years ago, Ha2 stands out -- not so much for staying on the cutting edge of technology and comfort as for the fact that it's still around. Initial overinvestment in the industry, followed by government policies designed to address social problems linked to Internet cafes, have taken their toll. In 2002 there were 32 Internet cafes in Shilin alone, now there are nine, Ha2 manager Rich Kao said.
It's harder now than it was to find an Internet cafe in Taipei, but there are still more than 200 licensed ones in the city to choose from. Others have gone underground, unable to comply with city regulations mandating that they not operate within 200m of a school and limiting the hours when minors can visit. Many Internet cafes, unable to attract new investors, look like time capsules from the turn of the century, albeit with newer games and smoke-yellowed walls.
"Half of the social problems in Taiwan, the government -- and the media -- have blamed on Internet cafes," said Jacky Wu, founder of industry giant Aztec Technology, which once had nearly 90 franchises across Taiwan but now operates around three-dozen.
The trouble started with concerns that teenagers were spending too much time in Internet cafes, where they were exposed to excessive violence in computer games and could easily obtain access to pornographic Web sites or meet ill-intentioned strangers in online chat rooms. A survey supervised by a former justice minister found that around 400,000 young students were visiting Internet cafes at least once a week, spending an average of eight-and-a half-hours there. It was speculated that more than a quarter of young patrons were addicted to online games.
The Taipei City government responded in 2001 by passing a statute regulating "information-recreation service providers", or Internet cafes. According to published accounts, 90 percent of the city's estimated 800 Internet cafes did not comply with some aspect of the statute, which in addition to restricting access by the young also mandated that such businesses only operate in commercial areas on streets 8m wide or larger, where rent was more expensive than the residential areas where most had set up shop. The national government responded with its own, less stringent regulations.
But the bad publicity continued. A few months after the regulations were approved, a young man was found paralyzed in an Internet cafe in Taipei County. He had been there for three days and had not left his seat except for occasional bathroom breaks. Earlier this year, an unemployed man who had become estranged from his wife died after spending three months in a Danshui Internet cafe. According to published accounts, the cafe's owner said that over his lengthy stay, the man played video games, chewed betel nut, ate instant noodles and smoked.
Jacky Wu, a thin man with a gray crew cut who had the air of someone who'd seen too many reporters, estimates there are now between 200 and 300 Internet cafes in Taipei, with another 300 to 400 in Taipei County. Though he now owns only one, Skywalker Multimedia Entertainment Center, just off Songjiang Road, his is one of the most well-appointed.
At 1,300m, Skywalker is larger than Ha but has fewer computers. There is a large area in the back with wood paneling and Chinese scrolls, where customers can rest on comfortable sofas while surfing the Web or flipping through magazines -- 50 new titles each month -- and comic books -- Skywalker has 40,000. There are also workstations equipped with Microsoft Office software, printers, a photocopier and a fax machine. The hourly fee is NT$60, double the average price, but drinks are free. Like Ha2, Skywalker has a large conference room for business meetings, and a dedicated area for computer gamers.
Wu, who also founded the Solar System MTV chain and the King of Comics franchise, believes that advances in home computing have not rendered Internet cafes obsolete. "You can sing karaoke at home, but people still go to KTVs. You can watch movies at home, but people still go to movie theaters," he said. "There is room in Taiwan for the kind of cyber cafes they have in Tokyo, the ones with showers and beds and all kinds of media devices. But right now the local economic environment is so bad that no one wants to invest in something new. And if you do, the government will regulate you to death."
Taipei's largest Internet cafe has found a way to turn the extra government attention to its advantage. Located across the street from a gas station south of Nanjing East Road (LHH Cyber Cafe has four floors jammed with 200 computers, which it replaces every two years. The new models are Dell workstations with Intel Core 2 Duo processors, NT$10,000 NVIDIA graphics cards and Web cams for use with Skype or instant messaging programs.
LHH has received the city education bureau's Outstanding Youth Recreational Venue award for each of the last four years, one of only seven Internet cafes and 40 youth hangouts, including playgrounds and museums, to have earned that distinction. It has received similar citations from the national government. "If a customer stays here too long, we'll tell him to go home, shower and take a rest," said LHH manager Wu Shu-fang, whose pink uniform shirt and curly hair made her look like a playground supervisor.
Both Wu Shu-fang and Ha's Kao believe their industry has consolidated its losses and could see a renewed phase of expansion once investors regain confidence in the local economy. "The Internet cafes that had problems have already closed," said Kao, a former convenience store and restaurant manager who has stayed in the business because he loves computer games. "The ones that are still here will keep getting better."
Jacky Wu said he will continue to upgrade Skywalker's technology, but sometimes it's hard to see a brighter future. "When the government looks at this business, they just see computer games. They don't see the real potential here," he said.
Date Posted: 1/5/2007