I have a nokia 6600 and use it successfully with the braille note mpower to
access the internet when away from home.  First of all, you need to ensure
that your cellular service offers the capability to use your phone in this
way.  I use t-mobile and had to pay an additional $20 per month to have this
functionality.  Once things are set up on your provider's end to allow this,
its not too bad getting your phone paired with the bn and using it as a
modem. 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sarah Van
Oosterwijck
Sent: Thursday, February 16, 2006 2:04 PM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] BlueTooth?

Bluetooth does work, meaning there is nothing wrong with the BrailleNote's
ability to pair and send bluetooth signal, as far as I can tell.  There
certainly is something wrong with everything that supposedly can use
bluetooth and the procedures required, however.  I haven't gotten a single
thing I own to work with bluetooth and the BrailleNote.  I can pair with my
cell phone and pretend to use it for wireless Internet, but my phone just
says something like "dialing 1" and does nothing else.  I can't imagine what
it is really doing.  I used the exact same connection settings as for my
dialup earthlink account, but of course I switched the modem to the Nokia
6620  cell phone, and turned off wait for a dial tone.  If anyone has a
similar phone and can give me some advise I'd really be a very happy person.
I really badly want to use my cellphone and BrailleNote for Internet access
in that way.

I had a port out of range problem with Activesync, so I couldn't use it with
my BrailleNote.  Now I think I solved that problem by installing a different
driver for bluetooth on my computer, but it still doesn't work.  Again I can
pair just fine, but activesync just doesn't find a device to connect to.
Actually it stopped working with USB when I tried to make it work with
bluetooth, so that was really counter productive.  I just can't express how
much I hate activesync.  I don't think anything makes me so mad.

The third thing I tried to make work with bluetooth was the BrailleNote as a
braille display.  I currently have to choose between speech I can tolerate,
and a braille display, because my synthesizer takes up my only com port.  If
I could use bluetooth for the connection for the braille display that would
solve that problem.  I first ran the JAWS maintenance wizard and chose
modify my installation.  I again checked BrailleNote in the list of
displays, but I was given no opportunity to choose a com port, so of course
it didn't work.  It also lost my synthesizer, thanks a lot stupid JAWS!  I
reinstalled my synthesizer and went back to beating at the com port problem.
I found a message someone had written about using the BrailleNote as a
braille display in JAWS and tried to follow those directions.  They really
didn't make much sense, and that is why I am not going to give the name of
the person who wrote them.  Either some steps were missing or something was
very mixed up.  I went through all the braille display options I could find
in JAWS.  In the configuration manager there isn't anything about com ports,
and in options, braille, you can change the com port, but 4 is the highest
port that you can choose.  I am willing to bet that there is absolutely no
one who can use bluetooth on a com port less than 5.  If someone has, then I
want to know how they accomplished it.
Either using bluetooth is just theoretical for me, or someone will have to
give directions for changing com ports used by braille displays and
synthesizers in JAWS manually.

Yes, I'd love to use my BrailleNote as a remote synthesizer with bluetooth.
I already have a cordless keyboard, but I can only use it as far from the
computer as I can hear my synthesizer, which isn't very far.  If my
synthesizer could come with me that problem would be solved.  I already
tried to buy and use some cordless headphones for that purpose, but they
hissed so loudly that I couldn't stand them.  I guess they were only made
for people blasting rock music that would cover up the signal to noise ratio
quality problem.
Again I don't know how to accomplish this because I don't know how to change
the com port used by a synthesizer.  Actually I do for all synthesizers
besides the keynote, but I can't get the option for a keynote synthesizer.
Am I supposed to be able to change it somehow? Where?

I don't care how complicated or convoluted the procedure is as long as
someone can give me real, tested, directions for solving any of my bluetooth
problems. <smile>

Oh, I recommend that anyone considering trying to make bluetooth work first
consider their state of mind and health at that moment.  Simply do not begin
if you aren't in perfect condition, and under no circomstances try all these
things in the same night.  I was too physically exhausted to do much when I
tried most of this stuff, but I thought I would be fine since it was only
mentally demanding.  I think by the end my husband was seriously considering
throughing me outside in the cold until I could calm down and shut up. LOL

Sarah Van Oosterwijck
Assistive Technology Trainer
http://home.earthlink.net/~netentity
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