I'll get to why I've posted this in clash of cultures, it feels like the best place to put it anyway.
As I am not registered at CS I can not post in smileyeagle's "If my mother..." post, but having said that, most of what I would say would be better off in fratching anyway.
First, the Grandfather is not a very nice man, not much of a news flash that now is it?
Second, not so long after moving back down here I took a short class on deaf awareness as a prelude to a much longer level one in BSL, just to see if I wanted to persue it as a second language. Most take the course as they are or will be working with members of the Deaf community or have a family member who is Deaf and are learning BSL in the evening as their child/nephew/niece etc are learning in the classroom. Whereas I was learning it as a second language much like others would take French.
The short course was good for me even if I chose not to take the full course, I did in the end, but due to family circumstances towards the year end flunked out and have not chosen to resit the first year 5+ years on. I did take the exam as I had paid for it, just to prove to myself I would fail it and not have it hanging over me as a "what if...?"
There were a few distinctions made between Deaf and deaf (hence putting this in clash of cultures), Deaf people, I was told, do not see themselves as disabled, but as a linguistic minority and those that become deaf due to old age or deafened due to loud noises etc, rarely if ever take classes in sign language as they are too used to verbal communication and rely on turning the volume up on the TV, hearing aids and having people just damn shout at them when they speak.
Minicoms and Relay services were meantioned but as technology has come up in leaps and bounds I found that Minicoms used circa 2004 were akin to something from the 80's, yet we had devices like the Amstrad em@iler a combination of telephone and basic email system, that could have easily been turned into a dedicated IM system with more than a few lines of LCD display, bad move there mr. Sugar.
But I don't know if people who go deaf or become deafened use Relay services or if they are the exclusive domain of Deaf users, not by way of discrimination saying "you were not born Deaf so you can not use this service" more "I'm set in my ways and can speak even if I need a great big grammaphone trumpet to my ear to hear.", so I don't see Gramps hanging up on someone who once had good hearing, as I can't say if anyone would use such a service.
I know my father was going slightly deaf as the TV used to be up a fair bit, CEEFAX page 888 wasn't available for every program and even if it was, I was the only one to use it, to see how good it was with multiple people talking or lengthy dialogue.
I turn subtitles on for some DVD's, especially those set in forign countries and had to watch the first 20 odd minutes of the DaVinci Code again as they didn't auto subtitle the french dialogue, although some films just say "speaks French"
"Speaks French" !?!, now I feel like I'm a linguistic minority, a french speaker would know what is being said and it sure as hell isn't fluff like "Quasont Baguette" and I don't buy that it is to help us relate more to the main character because s/he doesn't speak the language either, I don't speak Klingon yet they subtitled that.
Which gets me back to my initial interview with the course leaders for BSL, I assumed it was a semi modern language and international, I never knew it was centuries old and as such varied from country to country just as English is different to French, Spanish or German etc. and commented that probably more people speak Klingon than Esparanto and she seemed to hint iir that either probably eclipse BSL.
As I am not registered at CS I can not post in smileyeagle's "If my mother..." post, but having said that, most of what I would say would be better off in fratching anyway.
First, the Grandfather is not a very nice man, not much of a news flash that now is it?
Second, not so long after moving back down here I took a short class on deaf awareness as a prelude to a much longer level one in BSL, just to see if I wanted to persue it as a second language. Most take the course as they are or will be working with members of the Deaf community or have a family member who is Deaf and are learning BSL in the evening as their child/nephew/niece etc are learning in the classroom. Whereas I was learning it as a second language much like others would take French.
The short course was good for me even if I chose not to take the full course, I did in the end, but due to family circumstances towards the year end flunked out and have not chosen to resit the first year 5+ years on. I did take the exam as I had paid for it, just to prove to myself I would fail it and not have it hanging over me as a "what if...?"
There were a few distinctions made between Deaf and deaf (hence putting this in clash of cultures), Deaf people, I was told, do not see themselves as disabled, but as a linguistic minority and those that become deaf due to old age or deafened due to loud noises etc, rarely if ever take classes in sign language as they are too used to verbal communication and rely on turning the volume up on the TV, hearing aids and having people just damn shout at them when they speak.
Minicoms and Relay services were meantioned but as technology has come up in leaps and bounds I found that Minicoms used circa 2004 were akin to something from the 80's, yet we had devices like the Amstrad em@iler a combination of telephone and basic email system, that could have easily been turned into a dedicated IM system with more than a few lines of LCD display, bad move there mr. Sugar.
But I don't know if people who go deaf or become deafened use Relay services or if they are the exclusive domain of Deaf users, not by way of discrimination saying "you were not born Deaf so you can not use this service" more "I'm set in my ways and can speak even if I need a great big grammaphone trumpet to my ear to hear.", so I don't see Gramps hanging up on someone who once had good hearing, as I can't say if anyone would use such a service.
I know my father was going slightly deaf as the TV used to be up a fair bit, CEEFAX page 888 wasn't available for every program and even if it was, I was the only one to use it, to see how good it was with multiple people talking or lengthy dialogue.
I turn subtitles on for some DVD's, especially those set in forign countries and had to watch the first 20 odd minutes of the DaVinci Code again as they didn't auto subtitle the french dialogue, although some films just say "speaks French"
"Speaks French" !?!, now I feel like I'm a linguistic minority, a french speaker would know what is being said and it sure as hell isn't fluff like "Quasont Baguette" and I don't buy that it is to help us relate more to the main character because s/he doesn't speak the language either, I don't speak Klingon yet they subtitled that.
Which gets me back to my initial interview with the course leaders for BSL, I assumed it was a semi modern language and international, I never knew it was centuries old and as such varied from country to country just as English is different to French, Spanish or German etc. and commented that probably more people speak Klingon than Esparanto and she seemed to hint iir that either probably eclipse BSL.
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