There was a demonstration of sorts on today's ScreenlessSwitchers.com episode. You may want to check that out to hear how it works. I've only had my Nano for a few hours, and can say that it works extremely well. As menu items are selected, they speak. That's what you want it to do. There's not a whole lot more to say, really. I hope to record an episode of the Mac-cessiblity Podcast that is a full and comprehensive demonstration.

Josh de Lioncourt
Mac-cessibility: http://www.Lioncourt.com
Twitter: http://twitter.com/Lioncourt

"Beauty was a savage garden, so why should it wound him that the most despairing music is full of beauty?"
        The Vampire Lestat--Anne Rice



On Sep 18, 2008, at 9:38 PM, Justin Harford wrote:

Hi

Well that makes a great promotional, but could someone write about how well it actually works? What we can expect when we purchase it, bugs, purks, of course it talks but what else is there to know about it.

I have been wanting to try one of these things out for a while now but can't seem to figure out how as you have to set it up through your itunes library and you won't find any such unit at an apple store.

One interesting thing I did notice about the nano is that if it is playing music and you start to move through the menus, the music volume gets cut in half, presumably so that speech may be heard. Pretty cool, but again, no experience actually using the speech.

Regards
Justin Harford

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