Wow, Cheree! what a story!

Glad you had friends you could call and that all worked out well! :)

I love the fact that GPS apps are so prevalent on mobile platforms now. -And 
that so many of them are at least usable for us. It's very freeing when you 
think about it. :)

In addition to assisting people you are with, they can go a long way to helping 
people get acquainted with their environments so that we can really get a 
better sense of our surroundings.

Thanks for sharing and have a wonderful night!

Smiles,

Cara :)
On Aug 28, 2013, at 9:08 PM, Cheree Heppe <che...@dogsc4me.com> wrote:

Cheree Heppe here:

The use of the GPS in a car could only have happened to somebody in a sit-com, 
but, trust me, it happened to my friends and me this afternoon.
A pair of apparently solid sandals that I wore to work completely broke down, 
leaving me the choice of walking in my nearly bare feet over questionably clear 
sidewalks and streets to get home.  I decided that would be a very risky plan 
and phoned a family I have known for some years with an emergency plea for 
transport or to borrow a pair of shoes.  All of the girls and their mother wear 
the same size shoe as I do.
The mom, Carolyn, agreed to pick me up after my work day and drive me home and 
share a pair of shoes until I could step on to home turf and return them.
At about 17:25, long after I got outside in my nearly bare feet, they hadn't 
arrived.  Two phone calls determined that Carolyn had parked her SUV in one of 
those self-serve parking garages and walked several blocks to me.
When Carolyn and her daughter, Hannah, saw me outide my building, they 
simultaneously realized that they'd forgotten the loaner pair of shoes in their 
car.
Carolyn wore a double pair of socks and let me slip into her sneakers.  We 
carefully, for Carolyn's sake, wended our way to find the building and her SUV.
Once up the ramps and at the car, we all got inside, only to have Carolyn 
realize that her credit card was at home next to the laptop.  This car park 
requires a credit card in order to open the exit gates.
We decided to use my card.  Carolyn took it to the machine, where, because of 
Braille labelling I affixed with the card number, etc, it promptly got well and 
truly jammed in the machine.  Naturally, it hadn't gotten to the stage to let 
us, or the ever-growing line of cars and driers out of the parking structure.
On the automatic card machine now jammed with my card is a keypad to use in 
case of problems.  Carolyn dialed and explained that a card had gotten jammed 
in the machine.
Several staff from the Embassy Suites to which the parking structure belonged, 
came out and could not get the card out.  Meanwhile, the drivers were making 
increasingly interesting suggestions about our situation.
Finally, the hotel engineer came with a pair of needle-nose pliers and pulled 
the card out.
All and sundry breathed a really large sigh of relief and we all got free 
egress from there.
Not, for the GPS part.
Carolyn is not familiar with the city and I am not familiar with driver helps.  
What a team.  So, I brought up WAZE, a navigation and traffic GPS that one of 
my former readers swears by.  Sure enough, after I set it up, I had to turn off 
VoiceOver to Carolyn's sighted daughter could read the directions to Carolyn.  
WAZE is more accessible than it started out to be, but still is not blind 
friendly enough to use the way we would really like.  It's amazing for sighted 
users, however.
We found our way home beautifully.
If I actually learn how to use some of my GPS apps, I suspect I will have 
powerful tools in the palm of my hand.  I have Ariadne and Blind Square and 
they help more than hinder.  Maybe I'm making GPS progress, eh?


Regards,
Cheree Heppe
T

Sent from my IPhone 4S

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