Below is a very thorough comparison of BookSense and VictorReader Stream. 
BookSense certainly comes out as the winner.

Geetha

This article compares the new BookSense product sold by GW Micro and 
manufactured by Hims Co, LTD." with the well-established VictorReader Stream 
manufactured and sold by HumanWare. Both products are ultra-portable devices 
that enable the blind to read audio books, access books in several 
electronic text formats and listen to music. I have presented this 
information in a way that expresses what I believe, in my personal and 
professional opinion, to be the pros and cons of the new BookSense as 
compared with the VictorReader Stream from the perspective of an advanced 
blind technology user who has owned the Stream for almost two years and has 
just started using the BookSense two days ago.

BookSense Pros
The BookSense sports a plethora of new features and enhancements over the 
VictorReader Stream which are the basis for the vast majority of its 
strengths.

BookSense has a text-to-speech synthesizer that's far superior than that in 
the VR Stream. It uses the Kate and Paul voices at, I believe, 22 KHz. The 
vastly improved TTS engine is the primary reason I decided to purchase the 
BookSense despite my already owning a Stream. I read lots of electronic 
books during the fall and spring semesters in journalism school, and I was 
finding the TTS on the Stream slightly hard to handle for that purpose at 
times. In contrast, I have been reading a book I downloaded from Bookshare 
yesterday morning and have been enjoying it on the BookSense reading with 
the Kate voice. Kate and Paul are terrible when used as speech synthesizers 
for computers, IMHO, but they're quite appropriate for use on a book reading 
device like the BookSense. I heard these voices during the BookSense 
presentation, and I was sold after doing a bit more research.

BookSense is significantly smaller in size and lighter in weight as compared 
to the Stream. It is supplied with a lanyard that enables wearing the unit 
around the neck. The BookSense appears to be well-constructed with tough 
plastic and flatter buttons that seem to be less susceptible to wear and 
tear as compared to some of the controls found on the Stream.

BookSense enables charging of its battery through the USB connection while 
the Stream does not. This offers an obvious practical enhancement over the 
Stream, where only its proprietary charger may be used. Although charging 
through the USB connection requires a little more than twice the time (5 
versus 2 hours) to complete, the increased flexibility more than makes up 
for that minor disadvantage.

BookSense supports many formats not available on the Stream, including 
Audible Enhanced (high quality stereo books from Audible.com), iTunes, MP4 
and others. Support for WMA protected files, such as the Overdrive books you 
can acquire through public libraries, is promised in a future firmware 
upgrade.

BookSense has a clock! That's right. The device can act as a talking clock 
and you can hear the time even when it is otherwise powered off. Hardware 
limitations mean that the Stream will never provide this unless a revision 
is made requiring owners to purchase new units or spend a significant amount 
of additional funds on an upgrade. Lack of a clock on the Stream means that 
formats like protected WMA will never be supported because they require 
adherence to expiration dates and similar licensing rules. Besides, IMHO, it 
is just annoying that something as simple as a clock was left out of the 
design of the Stream.

BookSense incorporates a pair of internal stereo speakers that's actually 
loud enough to be useful!
BookSense records in honest-to-goodness stereo MP3 or wave formats at 
sampling rates high enough to be useful for podcasting, sound seeing tours 
and other situations outside the traditional classroom scenario imagined by 
the designers of the Stream.

BookSense XT sports an FM radio that allows blind users to finally enjoy 
some of the basics the sighted have always had, including verbal frequency 
read-out and station presets. I know this is rather silly, but I've always 
wanted a radio that would tell me the frequency and allow me to store 
presets in a way that's fully accessible. Of course, some ham radio gear has 
contained this level of accessibility for years, but it's nice to finally 
see it on a broadcast receiver.

BookSense XT has 4 GB of internal Flash storage, where the Stream has none 
at all. The BookSense is supplied with a 2 GB SD card and the BookSense XT 
is supplied with an 8 GB SD card. You're completely on your own to purchase 
an SD card for the Stream, which requires one to operate since it sports no 
internal storage.

The BookSense XT features Bluetooth for connection to a wireless headset. 
While this feature currently appears to be unreliable, I am confident the 
issues will be resolved in short order and the use of a wireless headset 
will be an enjoyable experience for BookSense XT owners.

Finally, but certainly no less important, the BookSense is sold in the 
United States by GW Micro, developers of the most flexible screen reader on 
the planet and a company known for its high touch and attention to 
top-drawer customer service and support.

BookSense Cons
Despite the arrival of this new book reader and player on the market, there 
is no combination of hardware and firmware that is 100 percent perfect. This 
couldn't be more true in the case of the BookSense. It is quite likely, 
however, that many if not all the disadvantages of the BookSense will be 
addressed in the near future by GW Micro and Hims, its South Korean 
manufacturer.

HumanWare has done an excellent job with the controls on the VR Stream, 
making it, perhaps, one of the easiest blindness technology products to use 
in the field as of this writing in mid-2009. All controls on the Stream 
feature good spacing and tactile features making them easy to identify and 
locate from a blind perspective. Although it is obvious that efforts were 
made to ensure a similarly easy experience with BookSense, its flatter, 
smoother controls may put off some users who might find them difficult to 
manage due to other conditions such as nerve damage in the fingers from 
diabetes.

On a similar note, HumanWare does a good job of packaging the Stream. The 
accompanying CD-ROM containing companion software, documentation and the 
tutorial is supplied in a case that is labeled in Braille for easy 
identification. The power supply has a rather unique rectangular shape and 
features several smoothed edges that make it easy to identify and set it 
apart from other adapters. In comparison, the BookSense CD-ROM, which 
contains no audio tutorial or companion software, is supplied in a basic 
paper sleeve with no Braille label, making it just another CD among many in 
one's collection. The power supply for the BookSense does feature a nice 
Braille label, but a switch found next to the plug provides no Braille or 
tactile indicator. Presuming this switch controls the AC input voltage, one 
might wonder how long it will take for GW Micro technical support to start 
dealing with burned up adapters and related hardware problems.

Documentation is another strong point in favor of the Stream. The CD-ROM 
accompanying the Stream features documentation in several text formats and 
an excellent audio tutorial created by Jeff Bishop, a broadcaster, 
Window-Eyes script developer and well-recognized participant in the 
connected online blind community. If you purchase your Stream from a dealer 
along with an SD card, it may contain some of this documentation in a form 
that is ready to read right on the Stream out of the box. In contrast, the 
CD-ROM accompanying the BookSense contains only the user's manual in four 
text formats: rich-text format (RTF), plain text (TXT) and two Microsoft 
Word documents (the older DOC and the newer DOCX). There is no audio 
tutorial or other content. Despite the fact that both the BookSense and 
BookSense XT are supplied with SD cards and the BookSense XT sports internal 
storage, the manual is not available on the BookSense until the user copies 
it to the appropriate folder.

Full text navigation is available on the Stream starting at the character 
level and moving all the way through paragraphs, pages and headings 
according to the format being read. In comparison, BookSense does not 
currently allow character-level navigation in text DAISY files such as those 
supplied by Bookshare. It is hoped this serious oversight will be corrected 
very soon. It is important to note that the Stream experienced similar 
challenges in version 1.0 of its firmware.

Overall simplicity and usability are solidly in the Stream's favor. Each 
button on the Stream has a well-defined function, menus are simple in nature 
and it is not necessary to understand Windows or other GUI concepts in order 
to become an expert user of the Stream. In comparison, the BookSense is a 
complex device. The manual describes the use of controls including combo 
boxes, dialogue boxes, edit boxes and menus. Each primary feature (Book 
Reader, DAISY Player, Media Player, Radio) is considered an application. It 
may be presumed that the extensive feature set found on the BookSense makes 
the complexity a necessary evil.

Though the BookSense XT features Bluetooth for connecting to a wireless 
headset, this functionality currently contains a serious bug making it 
unreliable. Several new BookSense owners have reported that, after reading 
for a short time, all audio goes silent and the BookSense completely locks 
up. GW Micro and the product's manufacturer are aware of this concern and 
are working to remedy the issue as soon as possible.

Finally, the BookSense is a new, version 1.0 product. There are bugs, 
oversights and unforeseen challenges that the Stream has already surpassed 
during its two years in the marketplace. As the BookSense matures, bugs will 
be squashed and exciting new features will be added. At the same time, 
HumanWare representatives have assured the blind community that the Stream 
will continue to prosper.

>From the site
http://accesstechnews.wordpress.com/2009/07/11/first-impressions-a-new-booksense-owner-compares-the-new-audio-player-and-book-reader-to-humanwares-victorreader-stream/


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Kiran Kaja" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, August 07, 2009 7:59 PM
Subject: Re: [AI] Comparison of portable daisy book readers.


Prices in the UK:

Victor Reader Stream with 2GB SD Card: 195 pounds
Plextalk PTP1: 279 pounds
Booksense: 250 pounds with a 10 per cent discount.
Booksense XT: 315 pounds with a 10 per cent discount.

If I had the choice, I would go for the booksense or the booksense xt
depending on the budget.

Regards,
Kiran
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sudhir R
(NeSTIT)
Sent: Friday, August 07, 2009 8:08 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AI] Comparison of portable daisy book readers.

OOOPS !  Forgot to paste the URL...



http://www.gwmicro.com/BookSense/Comparison_Chart/



________________________________

From: Sudhir R (NeSTIT)
Sent: Friday, August 07, 2009 12:35 PM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: Comparison of portable daisy book readers.



Hi folks !



I came across a comprehensive comparison of features between 4 portable
models of daisy book readers, viz. BookSense and BookSense XT from G W
Micro, Flextalk PTP 1 from Flextalk and the Victor Reader Stream from
Humanware.



May be, the comparison is not 100% objective, since it is a marketing
document from G W Micro, but, definitely the BookSense pair appears to have
superior features compared to the other two.  Kiran Kaja had also pointed
out this in his mail.



No price comparison is available.



Any idea who is the authorized dealer for GW Micro products in India ?
Also, appreciate if BookSense users on the list could share their
experiences.



Thanks and rgds



RS

+98 472 76 126



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