Ottawa Canada

Hello Barbara and list:

While the BrailleNote cannot work as a Baud mode TDD at present,
it can be used as an ASCII mode TDD as it can transmit at 110 BPS
to look like a model 33 or 35 TTY.

I am hearing, not deaf blind but on occasion have contemplated
how I would communicate with say my work or 911 if I woke up with
a real bad case of laryngitis.

Brian

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Barbara J. Wagreich
Sent: Monday, May 01, 2006 1:42 AM
To: [email protected]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Suggestions, priorities and philosophy


Dear Jonathan:

I'm deaf-blind and oral.  I'm responding to your comments
concerning
deaf-blind users.

Even though I'm oral, I'm profoundly deaf.  there's no way I
could use the
memo recording facility in the BN, and I would say the same for
most
deaf-blind users of the BN.  while deaf-blindness covers a broad
spectrum
of people, many of whom may have some residual hearing, only a
minority
would have enough to be able to profit from the memo recording
feature of
the BN.  Only a few who have enough residual hearing would be
able to use
it.

You also said that the Keysoft installations can be done
independently by
deaf-blind people.  when I sent a message to this list expressing
my
concern that the instructions for installing Keysoft 7 were not
deaf-blind
user friendly, I was serverly criticized and reprimanded by a few
users on
this lsit.  My comments were misudnerstood.  If people took the
time to
review the installation instructions for Keysoft 7, they might h
ave
understood my concern.  The instructions for the most part didn't
state
what one should see on the braille display besides the audio
cues.  I
wonder how many deaf-blind people that are profoundly deaf were
able to
install Keysoft 7 alone.

I also wonder if you have any deaf-blind BN uses who are
profoundly deaf
as beta testers?

You also mentioned that features were added to the BN to reduce
baggage
for BN users, such as the FM radio, the media player, and memo
recording.

We deaf-blind were hoping the BN would have some form of TDD
capability.
I understand Humanware is developing a separate TDD device, and
while I h
ave no details about this or its portability, it would also be
extra
baggage for deaf-blind people to carray around (and much heavier
than a
RFM radio, MP3 player, and cassettse recoder).  I would have been
delighted if there was a way to access the Internet TDD Relay
services
(there are at least three of them) using the BN -- this would be
great in
a power outage or when there is no access to a regular phone (it
could be
done with a cell phone).  Keyweb doesn't allow this at the
present time
but perhaps Humanware could work with one of the TDD relay
services that
provide on-line relay services to allow keyweb to access their
on-line
relay service.

some of us deaf-blind have recognized the ptential of the BN as a
face-to-face communications device using the visual display
feature and a
second keyboard.  However the details to set up the visual
display weren't
readily available and it took several friends and me a while to
figure out
how to do it by trial and error.  We found a lot of information
in the
help file for the Palm Viewer on the visual display but this info
wasn't
made available in a separate file, and BN tech support didn't
have any
info about how to set up the visual display to work withthe BN
(they said
they had never done it).  while this set-up is useful, it can be
problematic if the othe sighted person types faster than the
deaf-blidn
person can keep up with.  It isn't possible at the present time
for a deaf
blind person to read at his/her own pace while the sighted person
types.

I realize that deaf-blind users constitute a minority and
therefore may
not be regarded as big a user community as the group of blind
users.  I
understand that development is done for the biggest possible
market.  But
it would be a geginning to make the installation instructions
more
deaf-blind uer friendly, provide access to a on-line TDD Relay
service,
provide access to online chats like Instant Messenger (AIM) and
provide
information for setting up things like a communications setup.  A
competitor has already done much work in this area, but I much
prefer the
BN and would like to see it include more accessibility for the
deaf-blind.

Barbara Wagreich



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