Robert and Kathleen;
The ability to save a document on a flash card and read it with the
M-power makes it accessable for the deaf blind.  The only feature you
might miss is when the KNFB reader tells you how much of the page is in
focus.  Even with the shakyness from my epelepsi, I was able to take a
picture.  You only have to hold it for about 10 seconds while focusing
and taking the picture.  It is held about 16 inches above the page to
get a good picture of the whole page.
Check your chapter for a KNFB tester.  Maybe you can try it out.  Four
of my friends are testers.
Good luck in disiding.
Terry Powers


-----Original Message-----
From: robert stigile [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Monday, August 28, 2006 6:58 PM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] bn and Knfb reader question

Hello Kc,
the KNFB reader is exactly that, a reader.
It has a pda, and a digital camera attached to it.
When you have a document that you want to read, such as a typed 
letter, or your bills you can take a picture of it and then it 
will read it back to you.
The pda has optical character recognition software in it, which 
basically is like having a scanner, but this is handheld and very 
lightweight.
When you take a picture, the pda processes it and then it will 
start reading, when you have finished reading, you can take 
another picture or save the one you have just finished reading.  
If you save it, it will save it as a xmt file on the cf card in 
the unit.
When you have some documents saved on the reader you want to have 
in your braillenote, you can take the card out and insert it into 
the braillenote, then you would go to the folder on the cf card 
called documents, and open the file as you would any other file 
on a braillenote.  you could then read it in braille, save it to 
a hard drive if you have one, or edit the file and so forth.
You must have the current KNFB reader software which is version 
3.0.5 in order to do this.
Lastly, you mentioned, that you were wondering if this was a 
device that was for hearing or not, it only reads the text out 
loud through voice, if you added a braille display, it would 
drive the cost up so the KNFB foundation has not considered that 
at this time.
I hope this helps you, and if you have any further questions 
about the KNFB reader, please feel free to write me off list, for 
I was the ambassador for the beta testing in California, and I 
can answer many of your questions.
Take care,
Robert

> ----- Original Message -----
>From: kathleen spear <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: Braillenote List <[email protected]
>Date: Mon, 28 Aug 2006 15:32:57 -0700
>Subject: RE: [Braillenote] bn and Knfb reader question

>Dear Robert and List,

>First,  since Robert, and others  state the KNFB can be used with
>the M-Power, I'm assuming the  subject ison topic!  (Smile)

>Not  too long ago, I read about a very small scanner from
>Kurtzweil.  IT was supposedly voice only.  Since I'm deaf-blind, 
I
>didn't follow up on it.  My feeling is that others may  also be
>unaware of  exactly what the KNFB is.

>Robert, you stated something about  text documents.  So, would
>you please clarify:
>1.  Is the KNFB a scanner?
>2.  If so, are you saying you can scan and have a  text copy?
>(If that is the case,  do you need hearng to use the  KNFB?)

>KC

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