John,

Why do you want to change it, so the customer is in control? What if the 
customer set the battery low warning at one percent? What if that customer 
connected some accessories or just went out in the cold, which probably plays 
havoc with the battery.  If it went down to zero from one, wouldn't the 
customer lose all his data? I guess I'm saying there are probably safeguards 
built in, so the unit can store its memory.  There's one more factor to take 
into account.  Let's say you people at Pulsedata in New Zealand are the people 
that program Braille Note.  That's what I'm assuming.  The people at Pulsedata 
probably put a battery in Braille Note, there, too.  I'm assuming.  Now you 
send the unit to the  U.S.  What happens then? Is the unit stored until someone 
buys it? When that someone does, does someone test the battery? Does he put a 
new battery in it from the shelf, and if so what is the shelf life of that 
battery?
Brenda Mueller



> ----- Original Message -----
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: Braillenote List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Date: Tue, 10 Feb 2004 14:16:03 +1300
>Subject: Re: [Braillenote] battery low message

>Hi Paul. At present there isn't away to change this feature but I would
>like to see this added at some point.
>Jonathan Mosen
>BrailleNote Product Marketing Manager
>Pulse Data International Ltd

>DDI: +64-3-373-6192
>Fax:  +64-3-384 4933
>Mobile: +64-21 466 736
>Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Internet: www.pulsedata.com
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