Centre for Policy on Ageing
 

 

Making cash dispensers easier to use
Author(s)John Gill
Corporate AuthorSATURN Project, Royal National Institute for the Blind - RNIB
PublisherRNIB, London, 1996
Pages8 pp
SourceRNIB Production and Distribution Centre, Bakewell Road, PO Box 173, Peterborough, Cambs PE2 0WS.
KeywordsInformation technology ; Banks ; Physical disabilities ; Ergonomics ; Accessibility.
AnnotationWhen a person with a disability needs to use a cash dispenser, he or she may meet a number of difficulties. Some of these difficulties relate to finding the terminal or physically getting there, but many of the problems related to the user interface on the cash dispenser. A few years ago, a number of organisations realised that `smart cards' could potentially alleviate many of the problems concerning the user interfaces of self-service machines such as cash dispensers. As a result, the Saturn project was established with the support of the European Communities (EC). The author outlines the results of a field trial of a modified cash dispenser installed at the RNIB (Royal National Institute for the Blind) Resource Centre. (RH).
Accession NumberCPA-980313221 P
ClassmarkUVB: WNM: BN: 38: 5CA *

Data © Centre for Policy on Ageing

...from the Ageinfo database published by Centre for Policy on Ageing.
 

CPA home >> Ageinfo Database >> Queries to: webmaster@cpa.org.uk