LOL, I have to go into my apple store on Monday to get an issue with my Ipod's click wheel fixed. This was the same store I was in the other day when we couldn't figure out how to drag and drop. Now I have the instructions I think I'll take them to the genius bar and have them help me figure it out with all of your guidence. I feel like an idiot, but I can't get it to work despite following all the steps (encluding adding command to the key press) I'm frustrated, because this really shouldn't be causing me this amount of difficulty! I've figured out everything else with no trouble!
Anyways, we'll see how the genius bar guys and I get on this time!
I feel like we are educating a lot of our local apple store's employees on voice over's capabilities in general. Does anyone know how much training the average genius bar tech has with voice over?
Olivia

On Sep 19, 2008, at 5:51 PM, Janet and Felix * wrote:


We were a bit disappointed in our local Apple Store in our county here. The store in San Francisco that we were in on Monday had the Ipods syncked so they worked impressively! Reading all the menu choices and song lists.

But our store, not a singe one had the voice synked up on it. Worse, the employees didn't even know they had the voice capability! And neither did the manager. Yes, I took this issue all the way to the manager.

I told them all, I was very disappointed. And I reminded them that just 12 miles north of their store or so was Guide Dogs for the Blind. I told the manager, it's possible, that they might get a nice big group of blind folks in here all at once! If GDB decides to take a class to their mall for some work, and came into the Apple store! And they'd better get on the ball and be ready!

heh heh. I had that guy's eyes big. It was kind of funny. But hopefully, I irked them into getting those display models talking, and their empoyees up to date on how to work the voice menus, so they can help people.

And, how many other Apple stores don't have the voice syncked up in their demos, and employees that cannot tell you how it works because they don't even know it has the voice capability?

Just a heads up, you might have to educate them!

Felix did buy a 16 GB nano anyway, even though he didn't get to play with them again first in the store.


best,
janet

----------------------------------------
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Lioncourt.com Review: Shake, Shuffle, and Roll
Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2008 21:38:55 -0700

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
On Sep 18, 2008, at 9:22 PM, Josh de Lioncourt wrote:

Thanks go to Shane Jackson for his review of the iPod Nano 4G and
its speaking interface.  You can read the review at this link:

http://www.lioncourt.com/shake-shuffle-and-roll/

Josh de Lioncourt

...my other mail provider is an owl...








Reply via email to