It has no internal memory. It uses a flash drive. So whatever you can store
on the drive. I don't know how big the drive can be. Best thing to do is
just call your state library for the blind and have them send you one. If
you don't like it, send it back. Like I said, it's free. But make sure you
order the advanced player, not the standard player, otherwise you won't get
most of the important navigation features. I don't even know why they make
the standard player.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Salien Brown" <say...@gmail.com>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Monday, September 30, 2013 2:34 PM
Subject: Re: Recommendations for an audio book reader?
Thanks for the suggestions. Well I'm looking for something that's
portable, so I will probably want it to have a headphone jack. My main
concern is it having the ability to play Audible.com audio books. If I
stop at a certain point, the player will leave a bookmark or some sort of
marker to pick up where I left off later on. Also being able to hold a
nice amount of audio books is important too.
This "advanced book player from NLS," does it store a lot of audio books?
More importantly, is it easy to save audio books too it? Is there a
website where I can learn more about it?
At 01:20 PM 9/30/2013, you wrote:
If you're in the US, try the advanced book player from NLS. You can't put
it in your pocket, but it has a great speaker, dedicated buttons for
moving around, and it's free. You can get Kindle for your PC for free.
iPod touch or iPhone is also good. They're very versatile, and small. But
the crappy speaker means you may want to use headphones, and the touch
screen is not quite as easy to use as a keyboard or buttons.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Salien Brown" <say...@gmail.com>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Monday, September 30, 2013 4:45 AM
Subject: Recommendations for an audio book reader?
Hey gang,
Well I'm going to start listening to more audio books. I'm in the market
for the most accessible hardware/software combination for individuals who
are legally blind to do this with no issues?
Maybe there's an accessible device on the market that links directly to
audible.com, so you can download any purchases via Wi-Fi? I want
something that is current, not released like 2 - 5 years ago?
So I'm hoping that someone on this list can give me the info I need to
make a more informed decision? Money is no object for I'm looking at this
as a new hobby which will help me get away from listening to OTR shows so
much.
Thanks for any suggestions.
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