Roger,

You can get a serial to parallel converter.  This is not exactly what
you want to hear, since even these are £70 plus (I'd guess);  but it's
sure better than changing your embosser.  I'm pretty sure this works on
the mPower, but I'm sure someone could confirm this before you go out
spending your hard earned cash!  (I haven't used one personally.)


--
Carol
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 





-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Roger
Fordham
Sent: Thursday, September 15, 2005 8:30 PM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] software development kit?


Hi,

I am a completely new user of the Mpower Braillenote suite of programs. 
Firstly I have to say that I think the actual braille display fantastic.

I think that a few changes could be made to the introductory tutorial.
Being 
left-handed, I wanted to know how to change the thumb keys to support me

better; and although i was told that there was a left-handed mode, the 
tutorial was strangely silent about how to accomplish the task. Maybe
the 
staff could lood at this; it would only need a couple of lines. I did
find 
out how to change the thumb keys to accommodate my situation; but it
wasn't 
mentioned in the introductory tutorial.

Next, I wanted to emboss a document. I have an Index double-sided
embosser 
which uses a parralel port. I was told that this could be done; but I
had no 
advice as to what I should connect from the mpower serial port to the 
parralel port, and when I asked for advice, I was told by the Uk 
distributors of mpower that yes, there possibly was something available,
but 
that it might cost me around 150 pounds. It was a special box which did
... 
well this and that. There must be lots of folks like me who have an
embosser 
using a parralel port. A normal printer costing around 30 or 40 pounds
is 
reasonbale to make some sort of adjustment; but not an embosser such as 
mine, costing around 2,000 uk pounds. What is the solution of this
problem?

Next, I wondered if there was a disk drive supporting Cds, which I could

use, which would connect to the Usb port of the Mpower? Apparently not; 
there is no such thing supported yet. This is something of a
dissapointment; 
I should have thought it was not an unreasonabler request. Ah well, keep

hoping; perhaps it will come in time.

Apart from these small quibles, I find the Mpower a great product, and
am 
very pleased with it; and the braille display is terrific.

Cheers

Roger

----- Original Message ----- 
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Braillenote List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, September 15, 2005 7:34 PM
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] software development kit?


> Hi all, firstly this thread has been somewhat complicated because it 
> has diverged into the topic of whether you can get a virus on a 
> BrailleNote. The answer to that is quite simple. You can't, as the 
> message a list member forwarded from Dean yesterday explains in 
> detail.
>
> regarding the SDK, as those of you who've been on this list a while 
> will recall, earlier this year I put out a call for expressions of 
> interest from developers who would work with an SDK, so we could enter

> into some dialogue
> with them about applications and the extent of an SDK. We may well
still
> make something available, but frankly, what this exercise showed me
was
> that a lot of the clammer for an SDK is coming from users who are not
> developers. What people are really saying is that they want the 
> BrailleNote
> to do more, and an SDK is the perceived solution. For this large
group, 
> the
> SDK is the means, but not the ends. The end is more functionality.
>
> As you will know, we have substantially increased the resourcing on 
> the BrailleNote in the last 18 months or so. The growth has been 
> phenomenal. Since March of 2004, we've completely rewritten the 
> Planner, introduced BrailleNote PK with a raft of new functionality, 
> upgraded the operating system in the Classic units and introduced 
> wireless, introduced BrailleNote mPower with all its new features such

> as streaming, audio recording etc. So
> you can see that the growth really has been significant, even though
many
> of these projects have involved a lot of things taking place under the
> hood. The operating system upgrade process is complex, and obviously,
> designing and building a brand new piece of hardware is a major task.
Now
> that a lot of those infrastructural type projects are out of the way,
you
> will see even more and rapid improvement in the actual functionality
of
> KeySoft. KeySoft 7 promises to be our most exciting release ever. Some
of
> the things you say you want the BrailleNote to do are actively under
> development now. Does this mean that we're not going to do an SDK? Not
at
> all, it's still under consideration. But for the majority of our
users,
> what they want is for the BrailleNote family to do more things for
them,
> and that's our focus in everything we do.
>
> Jonathan Mosen
> BrailleNote Product Marketing Manager
> HumanWare
>
> DDI: +1-925-566-9265
> http://www.humanware.com
>
>
> ___
> 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
> 



___
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