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Have you ever wondered why it’s so hard for a sighted person to understand how a blind person “sees” a screen through a screen reader like JAWS for Windows? This 30 minute video is a basic JAWS for Windows demonstration, designed to help bridge that gap. One of the biggest differences is that screen readers work sequentially. A blind user doesn’t visually scan a screen. Instead, we move step by step, most often using the Tab key, Shift + Tab, and arrow keys, to navigate from one item to the next. That’s why instructions like “just go left” or “click over there” often don’t translate well. Some blind people have strong spatial concepts, some don’t, but in many cases those directions simply don’t exist in a screen-reader world. To make this clearer, I used ZoomText Fusion’s focus highlight alongside JAWS, slowed the speech down, and aligned what you see on the screen with what you hear in the audio. In the video, we navigate the Windows desktop, explore the taskbar and notification area, do some basic work in File Explorer, and browse a website (DATA Australasia) using headings and paragraphs. The goal is simple: to help sighted viewers better understand how screen readers render information, and how blind users navigate Windows every day. More videos like this are coming soon. #ScreenReaders #BlindAndLowVision #Accessibility #AssistiveTechnology #DigitalAccessibility #InclusiveDesign #DisabilityInclusion #AccessTechnology #ZoomTextFusion #WindowsAccessibility #BlindUsers #VisionImpairment #DATAAustralasia