Hello James,  I Have magic jack, have been using it fine.  One question,  I 
turned up the volume on the interface all the way,  some folks have told me 
that my speaking volume over my phone is kind of low,  Don't know rather it 
is the magicjack network, are my phone,  any one else ran in to this?
Regards  Don

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "JardataMailServicesBox" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Sunday, April 13, 2008 5:26 PM
Subject: Magicjack and Screenreaders


Hello James!

To answer your question about Magicjack and Screenreaders (JAWS or 
Windows-eyes), yes, a blind person can use it just fine.  All you do is 
insert the Magicjack into a USB port and it installs itself temporarily. 
You have to answer a few questions at the sign-in screen the first time, but 
that is it.  The interface on the screen is not to accessible, but it has a 
skype-like interface and you can enter numbers and there is a dial and 
hang-up button.  However, once the program is loaded, you can minimize the 
screen, so Magicjack is hidden or minimized; then you can plug a regular 
house phone into the MJ unit and you are ready to go.  You get a regular 
dial-tone and you can make phone calls directly from the regular phone.  You 
don't even have to use the screen at all.  It works directly like a regular 
phone.

One thing:  On my old Dell Desktop, once I plug the MJ unit, the sound goes 
to the phone (XP Pro); however, when I plug the MJ unit into the HP Desktop 
(Vista) I don't get the same effect and the sound stays with the computer. 
You can turn off JAWS and just use the phone.  Some guy said you could start 
JAWS first and plug in the MJ unit later and the USB may not take over the 
sound card.

Like I said, MJ is definitely usable via the phone regardless of your 
screenreader.

I have the unit and it works fine.  They could, however, do a little 
script-type work on the screen interface.  The good thing about it is that, 
once you get the unit, your phone costs go way down.  You only have to pay a 
small licensing fee in succeeding years ($18 a year for me, as I bought unit 
early, but it may be cheaper for current purchasers).  Free long distance in 
US and Canada and skype-type credits for calling abroad.  I think, however, 
that, if you sent a friend or relative in another country a unit, you could 
have free long-distance calling, as long as you both are logged on or if you 
call your MJ number and it is in England, they could answer it and pay 
nothing.  I like that.

James




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