Hi. Either exercise the braille display as you were doing or press f to
talk it flat. Let it run all the way down until nothing is happening. Then
turn it off and plug it in.
You might have to turn it on and off again, but e turn it off and let it
charge for two or three hours or more.
Since it takes over twelve hours to run down your battery you have a good one.
At 4/25/2004, you wrote:
Hello listers,
My name is Eva Abbas. I live in Ottawa Canada. I subscribed to your
list on the old address last year and stayed lurking for months then I
unsubscribed. In all that period, I didn't have a braille note. I only
wanted to learn about it from your discussions. Now I got one! I am
very happy with the fact that I now have a braille notetaker again. I
used to have a braille lite but it aged and broke. Anyway, my joy with
the new machine was not complete. I found out that its battery is not
good. After I charged it the first time, the battery lasted only for
about two hours. I charged it again, and the result was similar except
that it didn't even give me a warning of battery is low or battery is
critical. It just went flat. I was advised to charged it again and then
check the status of my battery gauge and if I find it inaccurate, I
should calibrate the battery. I did the braille display popping of pin
choice for draining the battery. It kept going for more than twelve
hours and then I plugged the adapter hoping the popping will stop. It
didn't. What am I supposed to do? Please anybody tell me.
Thanks in advance
God bless
Eva
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"The best things in life are not things at all".
Enthusiasm will be yours if you love God, love people,
and love life. Lord, the nearer I follow Your way,
the happier I become.
-----
___
To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit
http://list.pulsedata.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote
Paul Henrichsen
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
<home.pacbell.net/paulh52>