Hi Tom,

I don't have a QT, but I'd say the answers will be the same either way (someone please correct me if I'm wrong ...)


1.  I'm pretty sure you can't do that, sorry.

2. Either use a braille file/document (I think the QT has text documents as the default so you can either change that or there is a command for changing the created filetype on the go but I don't know it for QT sorry, it's backspace with x on the BT); or else change the display grade to computer braille by pressing the next and advanced thumb-keys simultaneously.




3. I don't think you can actually change a setting, but if you're moving by character it will say "cap [letter]" when you're on an uppercase one. And a word beginning with a capital letter is spoken at a higher pitch than its non-capitalised equivalent.


Hope that clarifies things for you,


Aine

----- Original Message -----
From: "Tom Behler" <[email protected]
To: "Braille Note e-mail list" <[email protected]
Date sent: Sun, 17 Jun 2012 21:42:32 -0400
Subject: [Braillenote] Some Questions On The Braille Note QT32

Hi, folks.

Well, I have been working with my new qwerty-style Braille Note Apex QT32, and I can tell you that it seems to be working much better for me than the
BT32 did.

I simply seem to feel more comfortable with the qwerty keyboard arrangement.

Anyway, I'm trying to master the ins and outs of Word Processing on the QT32, and have several questions. I hope I verbalize them clearly. If not,
please let me know, and I'll give it another try.

Here are my questions:

1. How can I configure the QT32 Braille display main cursor to follow along when I am editing a dopcument, rather than being stationary at the point where I initially started reading the document with the thumb keys? In other words, when I'm editing, I want my Braille display cursor to move along as the speech cursor does, so that it is where I am in the document at all times. Of course, I can bring the Braille Display cursor to where I am via the cursor routing buttons, but that isn't always efficient when editing a long document, and when trying to quickly make a lot of needed changes.

2. How can I configure the cursor router buttons to immediately move to the exact character I want to work with, rather than going to the first letter in the entire word initially? In other words, I find that I have to hit the cursor router button twice, before it ends up exactly where I want it for
editing purposes, and I'd like to avoid that if possible.

3. How can I configure the Braille Apex voice to have a considerably higher pitch, when I capitalize a letter? Right now, there is not much of a difference in pitch between capitalized and noncapitalized letters, and I'd
like to change that if possible.

Again, I hope these questions are clearly verbalized. If not, please let me
know.

Dr.  Tom Behler from Michigan





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