Hello, Mark, and all,

Apex optimized for braille (grin)--my point exactly.

Evelyn



----- Original Message -----
From: "Mark Higgins" <[email protected]
To: <[email protected]
Date sent: Wed, 16 Mar 2011 10:13:16 -0000
Subject: [Braillenote] The Grass is Always Greener

Dear List,

Having read the flood of emails about the Hims announcement let me add my voice to those who have spoken with caution: it is easy - very easy - to get seduced away by deluxe feature sets and what have you, and I speak as someone who has fallen victim to that in the past. My own view of the BrailleSense, however, is that it still has serious problems and has concentrated too much on bells and whistles to the detriment of resolving these particular serious problems. The braille translation is still way below par. There is nothing beyond a fairly clumsy implementation of US braille (they say it does UK Braille but it really doesn't, particularly in maths); you cannot suppress capital letter signs which might not be a problem in North america but in the UK we grew up reading without them and I rather like my Braille to appear as it would in books; you can't read seamlessly or continuously; you can't customise paragraph boundaries. Humanware is miles ahead of the competition in terms of Braille translation, especially if you live outside North america or want to use it to read or
write foreign languages.

Turning to the wordprocessor, the Hims wordprocessor is manifestly deficient if you want to produce professional quality documents. You have very little control, relatively speaking, over formatting. as a barrister here in the UK I very quickly abandoned any idea of producing draft orders, opinions, pleadings etc. using it because they looked scruffy and unprofessional. Not very good if you want to do these things on the go. I also found the scenario where you are reading one document and writing another where you had to keep activating read only mode in the wordprocessor very ungainly as compared with switching between the wordprocessor and the book reader as we
do with humanware devices.

Hims' processor speed on the brailleSense Plus is very, very slow. It is noticeable when one takes notes quickly that it is very swift to fall behind. I remember taking a note of judgment with it once and I had to wait for nearly five minutes after I had finished for it to catch up with me. I have to say that I am therefore sceptical about how it will manage with PDF files. It already takes a great deal of time to open long documents, and I mean documents of 500 or more pages, and PDF files will probably be of a
bigger file size than those more often than not.

The qwerty interface on the BrailleSense is very clumsily implimented. The mannual is even more clumsily written. The qwerty interface treats one line of text and one length of the Braille display as synonymous, making for a rather cumbersome experience when reading using the arrow keys. It's very
difficult, in other words, to flick through.

These are just some of the problems I experienced. I know there are people who will be very excited by these new features Hims have added, but all this BrailleNote is doomed stuff assumes that we all want the bells and whistles. Personally, I want a machine I can use efficiently in court. The slim, light Apex fits the bill perfectly and its Braille translation is second to none. The web browser is working well, I like text adventures and the planner and database applications also come in useful. I don't really care about an awful lot else. If I want to do something awfully complicated I'll wait until I'm in front of my PC; if I want to tweet, read an unprotected PDF or mess around on Facebook on the go I'll use my iPhone. PDF support might be useful I suppose but the reality is that most useful PDFs from my point of view consist entirely of images and in that connection, Hims don't take you any further forward. If I had one wish, I would wish that Humanware would make the Apex truly compatible with portable printers such
as the Pentax Pocketjet.

I do support Techies' requests to have the SDK. some really useful talent could be unlocked there. At the same time, however, I hope techies' appreciate that some of us when it comes to notetakers are of but simple tastes and that thing ssuch as paragraph boundaries matter so much more to
us than an application to polish your shoes.

Best,
Mark Higgins


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  • ... Mark Higgins
    • ... Terri Pannett
    • ... Mark Higgins
      • ... crazy-shawty aka everything you're muther wanted you to be but you aint quite turned out like me?
      • ... Carol Pearson
    • ... evelyn weckerly
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