Dear Joseph,

Reading your post almost makes me wonder if you are a GW Micro, or Hims 
employee. Are you? You seam to write with a bit of authority about what the 
braille sense is and is not, and what we can or can not expect from it.

I would love for GW Micro to get more out of Hims, not less, how about 
yourself? 

I find that many times, where there is a will, there is a way. If we can't do 
this, and we can't do that with the braille sense, there may be other machines 
that can this and that, and more.

I do not plan to ditch my BS, but I almost did due to the unusability of my 
very large and slow schedule manager file. Just place some recurring 
appointments in, and you'll see what I mean.

Remember that the braille sense plus is now more flexible with hardware 
configurations. At least I think so, since the cacing can be easilly accessed, 
and components reconfigured, the insides redesigned and such.

If windows c is so restrictive, why continue to use it? The answer may just be 
to keep all the prior development that went into the Sense products. All the 
programs that Hims will keep the same because of there not being a large enough 
demand and so on.

I understand a company must maximize their efforts, but I don't work for that 
company. I work with a product made by that company. It is in my best interest 
that the company stay healthy, but it is even more in my best interest that the 
product I use do what I need it to do.

Heck, I am not asking for the Braille Sense to cook for me, just that it be 
good at keeping my written recipes.

Antonio Guimaraes

If an infinite number of rednecks riding in an infinite number of pickup trucks 
fire an infinite number of shotgun rounds at an infinite number of highway 
signs, they will eventually produce all the world's great literary works in 
Braille.

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  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Joseph Lee 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, August 14, 2009 1:07 AM
  Subject: [GWN] Braille Sense and its limits


  Hi folks,

  Nice to see a steady flow of suggestions about Braille sense. Some of them 
included foreign language support, word count and so forth. Although they were 
good ones, one needs to consider if it is worth it to put it on a device that 
has technical limits. Not that I am saying that BS family has outward limits, 
but in terms of specs and OS, it does have limits.

  First, as mike said, Braille Sense  is a PDA. In other words, Braille Sense 
is meant to be PC companion, not a PC replacement (although I've seen some 
people mistaken it for such). In other words, not all things that can be done 
on a computer cannot be done under Braille Sense. For instance, not all 
websites that a Windows XP machine can handle cannot be navigated using Braille 
Sense.

  On the hardware side, the line between PC and PDA is becoming less 
differentiated - at least when BS is concerned. Braille Sense has one of the 
good processors for mobile devices, as well as sufficient memory to run 
applications and store useful data. But in terms of software side, it is not. 
Braille Sense runs under Windows CE - not regular Wihndows, folks. Windows CE 
is a completely different OS architecture than Windows NT family. Thus, it has 
limits, such as 32 MB of virtual memory and 32 process limit (this is the 
reason why BS would only allow seven programs maximum). As for virtual memory, 
I need solid evidence of things such as browser crashing or other slow downs 
before explaining what exactly it is and its limits (if demands requires me to, 
but right now I am going through summer school in college).

  Also, as I have stressed on another list, writing code for embedded devices 
such as Braille Sense carries different requirements. One needs to be careful 
about memory usage, processor architecture and so forth. Just because we 
imagine things in our heads and pray that it will appear out of nowhere does 
not mean that it will happen soon - one needs to plan, compose, debug, 
recompile and release the software (if stable enough) numerous times before a 
suggestion or feature request will work properly.

  Also, it seems that the manual is wrong about type of USB port. Braille Sense 
does NOT have USB OTG (On-the-go) technology at all. All it has are one USB 
host and one USB client, that's all. If it had OTG port, theoretically Braille 
Sense can work with two USB client devices at once - one on BS's own uSB host 
port, another one on the USB client port with a dedicated adapter.

  As to what USB OTG standard is, I'll compose the article in question when 
there is enough demand. For those who have seen me on other lists, you would 
know what OTG is and my article style.

  Cheers,

  Joseph P.S. Alex, do you agree with me on this one?

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