Actually, I have just tried again with the cable which acts as both interface
cable nd charger (one plugs the cable into an adaptor) which kept falling out
before; it’s a magnet where it attaches to the Actilino, which as we all know,
can be tricky. But I have finally done it. I’m amazed the tec
I also got from the user manual that you can’t transfer plain text to the
device and have it contracted on the actilino itsself. you have to contract it
through transfer on their software. that was the deal breaker for me. the
neobraille also moves the display automatically it seems. I am starti
This was my initial response as well. However, it works quite nicely with
Bluetooth; the Braille is excellent; it is comfortable to use, and most
importantly for me, it has automatic tactile control which allows for reading
without having to manually go backwards and forwards (although one can,
I looked at the actilino. I decided against it because it uses all windows
software. there isn’t even a way to update it with a mac. that made it
absolutely unfeasible for me.
On Nov 11, 2017, at 1:54 PM, Christine Grassman wrote:
Hello all:
For the past two days, I have attempted to connect a
You know, I had the same or similar problem with at least one Usb port. I
found that it happened after I jabbed my headphone jack into it by mistake. It
apparently set some switch, so I found that I just needed to go back into it
at the bottom corner, where I could feel it closer to the open
Hello all:
For the past two days, I have attempted to connect an Actilino Braille display
for the purpose of transferring BRF files to read on the Actilino. However,
each time I connect it to my 2014 Macbook Air, I receive a “USB accessories
disabled; remove the USB device which is drawing too m