Good question. Better question - Why is brail used on signs in public buildings. How the hell is a blind person supposed to know there is a brail sign on that random part of the wall he should be reading?
Basically, it's just a way to make people feel compassionate.
On the ATM it's so a blind person's care giver can take them to the ATM, then the blind person can enter the numbers with privacy while his caregiver insists he isn't watching.
2007-02-28 10:50:32
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Drive-up ATM buttons are marked with braille because federal regulations require it. To be specific, section 4.34.4 of the ADA Accessibility Guidelines for Buildings and Facilities (Appendix to Part 1191, 36 CFR Chapter XI, issued pursuant to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990) says, "Instructions and all information for use [of an automated teller machine] shall be made accessible to and independently usable by persons with vision impairments." Drive-up ATMs, unlike the walk-up variety, don't need to be wheelchair accessible, but the rules make no exception regarding accessibility by the blind.
You're now thinking: boy, those federal bureaucrats sure are stupid. Don't they realize a blind person isn't going to be able to drive to a drive-up ATM? Cecil reserves judgment on the stupidity question, but even if the feds weren't smart enough to notice this little problem on their own, there were plenty of poeple who pointed it out for them before the rule was finalized. The American Bankers Association, for one, asked that drive-up machines be exempt from the visually-impaired requirement, arguing that a blind person using a drive-up ATM would have to be a passenger and that the driver of the vehicle could help with the transaction.
No dice, said the Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, reasoning that driver assistance "would not allow the [blind] individual to use the ATM independently." This may sound like one of those absurd points of principle, but ATM manufacturers say a fair number of blind people do take cabs to drive-up ATMs, and nobody wants to ask a total stranger to help with a financial transaction.
Your question does point to a more serious problem, which other readers have also raised: how the hell is a blind person supposed to use any kind of ATM? Whether the keypad numbers are identified with braille or not, there isn't any braille translation of the on-screen instructions, without which the machine is useless. Maybe, you're thinking, the problem isn't the brainless bureaucrats, it's the brainless (or cynical) bankers and ATM builders, who figure a pretense of accessibility will get them off the hook.
But that isn't it either. At the time the accessibility rules were written, and to a great extent still today, there was no agreement on the best way to make ATMs accessible to the blind. More than 50 ideas have been proposed, including a "talking machine," detailed braille instructions, an automated "bank-by-phone" setup with a telephone handset and a keypad, and so on. (Sample problem: if you use a "voice guided" ATM, how do you keep others from overhearing?) Another difficulty was retrofitting the thousands of machines already installed.
The bankers and ATM builders argued that the best thing to do was leave the federal rules vague until the industry figured out a practical approach. The not-entirely-satisfactory solution in the interim has been to (1) mark ATM keypads, input and output slots, etc., with braille, and (2) send braille ATM instruction brochures or audio cassettes to blind bank patrons requesting them. The theory is that while ATM operation varies from machine to machine, people conduct most of their transactions at just a few locations, the operating sequences for which they can memorize. The drawback of this approach is that you have to know that the special instructions are available and you can only use the machines you have instructions for.
Happily, the banks and ATM builders have been reasonably diligent in trying to come up with more accessible equipment, some of which is starting to show up in the marketplace now. About time, say some advocacy groups. "We don't want to see information technology [e.g., ATMs] become the new curb," says Elga Joffee of the American Foundation for the Blind. "There's certainly no reason to squelch evolving technology. I just wish they'd hurry up and evolve it."
2007-02-28 10:50:45
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answer #2
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answered by mrs sexy pants 6
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Financial reasons.
That way the factory doesn't have to make a separate set of buttons just for drive through ATMs. It would cost more than necessary if they did.
2007-02-28 10:49:04
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answer #3
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answered by gruz 3
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ATM makers don't know the difference between drive-up ATMs and the ATMs in banks or stores. They use one template on everything.
2007-02-28 10:48:26
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answer #4
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answered by FaZizzle 7
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For walk ups, even if it is a drive trou ATM, it's the same as in stores.
2007-02-28 10:48:39
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answer #5
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answered by ✔ 5
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gosh golly gee!!!! (LOL)
that was a really good question!!!
i'm gonna ask that to myself and everyone in the care now everytime i drive up to an ATM!!! (for real)
2007-02-28 11:34:16
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answer #6
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answered by D.... 4
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Because even the blind have money in the bank. They may be on foot or they may be with someone in a car.*
2007-02-28 10:52:46
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answer #7
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answered by Check this out! 7
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It's to keep the bird droppings from sliding off.
2007-02-28 10:48:50
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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just because they are bl....oh i see what you mean. if they are blind then how do they drive... this is one of my favorite phrases in life. I do it because I can
2007-02-28 10:48:56
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answer #9
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answered by conƒused-little-man 2
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haha i have always wanted to know that too!!
2007-02-28 10:48:34
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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