hehe, now if the blindness specific vendors would just get the message.
-Eric
On Nov 9, 2010, at 1:42 PM, Joshua Loya wrote:
> I tend to agree with Scott. An iPad, with a Bluetooth keyboard is much less
> expensive than a blindness specific note taker, and Mike Calvo reviewed a
> particularly
I tend to agree with Scott. An iPad, with a Bluetooth keyboard is much less
expensive than a blindness specific note taker, and Mike Calvo reviewed a
particularly nice case on a recent Serotek Podcast.
An iPad may mostly be a media consumption device for our sighted counterparts,
but, with the
Hi Scott and all,
I agree with you to some extent. I know what you mean but I can't be without my
Braille display. I know what you mean about the price of access technology. BUt
I just love my Braillino so much but more for it's display and ease of use of
notes on the fly. But this can also be
Honestly, thisis my own personal take and I hope I don't offend anyne but I
don't like a lot of things about blind notakers so I tend towards the off the
shelf.
Being so grossly over charged for a device which is basically a mid
1990S pocket PC or at best a dead windows mobile platform
I also have a braillenote and I like my mac as well. I was so happy when I
got it, I was speechless after I set it up with no sighted assistance. I
have not obtained my I phone as sprint is taking it's sweet time of getting
I phones. I cant wait to get rid of my q9c. My plan is up in dec so
Hi Marlaina,
I have enjoyed reading your views. I am in your camp I believe as I still use
the Braillino's note taking capability at work just because if I need to take
down dictation fast, I'm much quicker typing in Braille than I am at the
computer keyboard. I can type pretty quickly on the k
I like the notetakers because they give you a one-piece unit with braille. I'm
a voracious reader, and I'd always rather read myself than hear a book read out
loud, so for me a notetaker serves a real purpose. I find having two
different pieces cumbersome when you're reading while traveling a
Well, if I hooked up my apex to the Air, I'd be dealing with 2 separate
devices. And when I am quickly needing to find an item in a list of 80 items
so I can edit it on the fly during a live event like our convention, I need
speed and absolute accuracy. With the apex, my fingers are all on one
Hi everyone,
I thought I'd chime in here. Having used the BrailleNote, BT32, Pacmate, and
now Braillino I have to say if I were going to college now, what I would use
is the Iphone for notes or my Macbook combined with the Braillino as a Braille
display. I hope the Braillino will be supported
Hi.
I have used a pacmate too, I hate it, it is heavy. But I am so happy to use my
IPhone/Ipod together with my focus 40 blue braille display. I also use my
braille display on my mac computer, it really works great.
Best regards Annie.
On Nov 8, 2010, at 4:05 PM, Chenelle Hancock wrote:
> I ha
I have to say having used both blind note takers and the mb pro/ the i-phone
3gs. I have found the mb family of products to be much more accessible to me
as a vi person then the blind note takers. I still also have my original qx
400 pac mate and let me tell you!. I cannot stand that damn not
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