Hi,
I agree. There should be training sessions for the BN. I'm still pretty new at the BN, and it would have been great to be able to go to extra training. And I agree with the rest of what you said as well. There are many other things I would like to be able to do with the BrailleNote Apex, such as read full websites.

"Blindness is not what defines me, yet there are many things that do."
Jasmine Kotsay, 2007

----- Original Message -----
From: Vaughan Roles <[email protected]
To: braillenote <[email protected]
Date sent: Sun, 25 Mar 2012 01:42:48 +1100
Subject: [Braillenote] Braille Note Apex - can it keep up and will Humanwarerise to the challenge

Hi list,

I ask you all to read this post and, if you have comments, make them so those at Humanware see that I am not the only one with these views.

I have been using a Braille Note Apex now for just over a year. What the unit does, it does really well. It's an excellent note taker,
gives a great braille reading experience and has an easy to use
calendar. The contacts app is great if you use it exclusively for keeping track of your contacts, but if you want to synchronize between
devices it can be a little clunkey.

I work as a criminal lawyer and use the braille note every day in
court. I don't use it because its my ideal device, but it is, until the last round of American tech shows, the best available unit. I
carry an iPhone to access the net and look up law.  If I had the
choice, I would do all this from the braille note.

The braille note would blow the competition away if it had:-

1.  Imap email access;
2.  some way to attach a portable reading solution to it.  This,
respectfully, is critical to students and professionals alike. Anyone who buys the Braille Note is buying portability. It is not enough to be able to type notes - you also need to be able to read on the go.
3.  A platform where full sites render instead of mobile sites.
4. The ability to do footnoting and have this transfer into either
word 2003 or, preferably, word 2007 and 2010 files.

Another huge advantage for time poor people such as myself would be a regular series of training sessions. Freedom Scientific do this really
well with Jaws - Humanware could emulate this for the Apex.

I hear many people say it is already easy to use and can be learnt quickly. That's true, but if that were the test for whether or not companies should run training for end users, why does Apple have so
many training sessions for their products? The training sessions
should be focused on specific applications within the Braille Note family and follow a pattern. E.g. getting started, using the word
processer, advanced word processing - I think you get the drift.

I think Humanware makes great products, but unless features are
updated quickly on the Braille Note Apex, there is a danger that the Braille Sense U2 from Hims or the other note takers announced at the tech shows will start taking significant market share. This would be a pity given Humanware's undisputed commitment to Braille over the last
20 years.

Finally, can someone tell me if Humanware monitor this list or should
I send these suggestions to the R and D team in Canada?

Vaughan
--
Vaughan Roles
Ph: 0425211038

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