At one point in time, I felt the same way you do about touch screens. One
day I was curious about the Ipod touch, so I downloaded all of the podcasts
I could find on it. The more I listened, I was amazed with what Apple did
with voiceover. I was delighted to find that there are a number of apps
that are accessible with voiceover. There is one thing I like about the
booksense over the Ipod touch, it supports mass storage. I feel mass
storage is easier to work with. I just figured out on how to get around a
problem with importing m3u playlists into Itunes. I'm happy to say, it
works just like I want it too.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Missy Hoppe" <[email protected]>
To: "Booksense Support" <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, October 24, 2010 10:30 AM
Subject: Re: [GW-Booksense] Important Announcement Regarding GW Micro and
HIMS Partnership
I completely agree with you about touch screens. I've seen a friend's
iphone, and although he swears by the thing, I just didn't like it at all.
The touch screen just doesn't make sense to me, and even with speech, I
don't consider it to be accessible.Also, I don't like the speech used by the
apple products. If I could tolerate that speech, I'd still be using the
victor reader stream I used to have. I don't have a dedicated note taking
device because I can't afford anything like that, but my desktop computer
meets all my needs quite nicely, and I'm very happy with my htcs743 cell
phone. It can serve as a notetaker in an emergency. I love my booksense,
though, and hope that I'll be able to enjoy using it for many years to come.
Missy
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