Kathy,
I understand what you mean. I don't understand why TSI wouldn't do the 
job. I guess it was going to be too much of a software upgrade. they were 
too busy working on other things like the powerbraille 40 and such. I 
think the Easylink can do this cause you can have a wireless keyboard. A 
wireless keyboard that is a qwerty board.
but let me talk to the people about this and see what they have to say.
Isaac

On Mon, 4 Jul 2005, Kathy Williams wrote:

> The Braillemate didn't require a desk. That was why I wanted it to use with 
> my clients. I could hold it on my hand, Braille with the other hand and let 
> them read the braille as it went by on the single cell. I just wanted the 
> abilit to flip the signal to the cell so thei could read with their hand 
> coming towards me at the top of the braillemate as I was looking at it rather 
> than our 3 hands coming from the same side with us cheek to jowel so to 
> speak. It would have been easy just to do like a chord f and have the display 
> flip dot 1 for dot 6 2 for 5 and so on. They couldn't see the use and 
> wouldn't even try.
> 
> I'll check your suggestion when I'm up tomorrow. I want to look at the 
> devices you speak of online to see what they look like and how they'd handle 
> in this application.
> 
> ___
> To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit
> http://list.humanware.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote
> 

Reply via email to