Yes, I agree. I use my Braille Sense, but for years since my Sciences For 
The Blind clocks--two exactly--have worn out I am fair at counting down time 
in my head, but as I get older can't do that as reliablely as I could. Those 
SFB clocks were the best though because they seemed to stay accurate longer. 
You'd be surprised at the grief I got for calling the WWV phone number to 
reset stuff (303-4997111)


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Tom" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Wednesday, June 20, 2007 7:53 AM
Subject: RE: Refreshable Braille clock for broadcasters


> For years I've thought it would be nice to have a simple
> little clock with a braille display.  I wore out two of the
> mechanical ones produced by Science for the Blind products.
> Very valuable for a blind broadcaster for getting into a
> network, back timing songs etc.
>
> Hope braille displays become inexpensive enough some day to
> make them practical to be used in a clock.
>
> Tom
>
> ** Message Separator **
>>I'm looking for a way to monitor the current time by second.
>> This was a very handy feature of the Braille Lite, but I
>>can't find any other way of doing it.
>>
>>Pac Mate does have a stopwatch feature but this is
>>cumbersome when you're wanting a live cue, counting up to mid
>>night etc.
>
>
>
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