Good Morning:  Can you give a little more information on what you are referring to as braille screen input to this phone, please? Are you referencing using a Braille Screen Overlay or some other device for this use.

Dave


On 2/28/2025 5:48 PM, 'Richard Turner' via VIPhone wrote:
I don't know if you saw the article from AppleVis.com, but here it is.

Hands On with the iPhone 16e: My First Impressions


iPhone 16e availability in the U.S. is less than 24 hours away, and ahead of 
the launch, I was provided a unit for review.
Going into today, I was looking forward to sharing the iPhone 16e with our 
community, especially as there has been much anticipation and excitement on 
AppleVis surrounding this phone in particular. Unboxing podcasts are a lot of 
fun, especially when the recording goes well. And I am of the opinion that as 
Apple no longer sells a device with a Home Button, we should be doing 
everything possible to ease the transition for people who are still on older 
devices for whatever reason. It’s a bigger deal than you might think, 
especially for the everyday blind, DeafBlind, or low vision user who really 
relies on that Home Button as an anchor.
All in all, there is a lot to talk about with the iPhone 16e, but I wasn’t 
going to say any of it today. But that changed when I actually experienced the 
iPhone 16e for myself.
The iPhone 16e is Apple’s most affordable phone at US$599, and, to be honest, I 
was disappointed by the price when it was announced. I see the iPhone 16e as 
the iPhone for the everyday person, the person who just needs an iPhone to do 
the basic things. And I really was hoping Apple could get the price down to 
something under $500 and make that phone available to as many people as 
possible. On the other hand, the iPhone 16e has a lot of advanced tech (a 
current-generation A18 processor, Apple Intelligence, the Action Button, an 
all-new Apple-designed modem, just to name four); so the starting price is more 
understandable when you consider what all you’re getting.
Concerns about price aside, I tried to approach reviewing the iPhone 16e with 
an open mind. I know what I like in an iPhone, and I also know that the iPhone 
16e is meant for a different type of user than me. And yet, I interact with 
people from all walks of life; and for many of them, all they want is a basic 
iPhone. So the iPhone 16e interested me at first for those reasons: Is this the 
modern iPhone for everyone?
As interested as I first was in the iPhone 16e, I never expected that I would 
personally ‘like’ it—especially after only a few hours with the device. But I 
do like it—a lot.
Generally, I gravitate towards the bigger phones for their battery, speaker, 
and bigger ‘feel’. ‘Bigger’ has always meant ‘better’ to me. But the iPhone 16e 
challenges my assumptions in a pretty big way, no pun intended. Contrary to my 
expectations, I actually really like the thing. I like the way it feels in my 
hand. Picking it up, holding it while on the phone, even sending messages with 
Braille Screen Input—it feels great. And this was unexpected to say the least.
Perhaps just as unexpected and even better than the device’s ‘hand-feel’, are 
the speakers. Yes, I said ‘speakers’ because both the bottom speaker and 
earpiece speaker are noticeably better than my $600-more-expensive iPhone 16 
Pro Max. In my review of the iPhone 16 Pro Max, I shared about issues with the 
quality of sound output from the speakers. Other members of the community have 
experienced similar issues.
I am happy to report that the sound on the iPhone 16e has none of these issues. 
At higher volume, the iPhone 16e puts out a lot of bass for its size. (I 
remember my iPhone 15 Pro being similar.) But, unlike my personal iPhone 16 Pro 
Max, the iPhone 16e better maintains this bass at lower volumes. There is none 
of the dramatic fluctuation in bass with volume adjustment that I see on my 
iPhone 16 Pro Max, and this is a subtle—but nevertheless huge—improvement.
And it is not just the bottom speaker that is improved; the earpiece speaker 
has more bass as well, making the sound fuller and more natural. I was on a 
FaceTime audio call shortly after setting up the iPhone 16e, and I actually 
called the person back from my iPhone 16 Pro Max to be sure I wasn’t just 
imagining things. I wasn’t—the speaker quality is just better. If the speakers 
are important to you, you will really like the iPhone 16e.
The iPhone 16e has a 6.1-inch display, similar to recent smaller iPhones. If 
you have seen an iPhone 13 or 14, or their Pro counterparts, for example, the 
iPhone 16e’s size will be familiar to you. The iPhone 16e has the same A18 
series processor as other iPhone 16 devices, and VoiceOver performance is as 
snappy as on my iPhone 16 Pro Max.
In the iPhone 16e, Apple has tried to make the iPhone 16 experience available 
to more people at a lower price. The device has a lot to like: the same series 
of processor, support for Apple Intelligence, and other key features of the 
iPhone 16 family—even an Action Button. But there is no getting around the fact 
that the iPhone 16e’s starting price tag of US$599 is still way out of reach of 
a lot of people, which is both unfortunate and also a lost market opportunity 
for Apple. Nevertheless, everything I have seen with the iPhone 16e so far 
suggests that Apple may very well have a hit on its hands.
Watch this space.

Article from:
https://applevis.com/blog/hands-iphone-16e-my-first-impressions


Richard, USA
"While striving for perfection, let us do what is possible." -- John Wesley

My web site: https://www.turner42.com

(sent from my iPhone 16 pro) c


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