I also like having an IPHone and iPad mini.  It gives one device a rest at 
times lol. Also certain things work better on one over the other. It just gives 
a nice change of pace at times.
On Nov 14, 2013, at 7:24 PM, Mary Otten <motte...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I also have no vision, but I'm glad I have an iPad, and am planning to get a 
> mini. I use my i-devices for so much, that I would not want to depend on just 
> the one phone. There's  audible, Kindle iBooks. And those are just the 
> reading things. There is Twitter, email, and some wordprocessing. In fact, I 
> would be interested in knowing more about the accessible version of quick 
> office for iPad. This is the first I've heard of that.
> In some cases, apps will look and perform differently on the two devices. For 
> instance, with websites, on the iPad, you get the regular website. On the 
> phone, you get the mobile site. Some apps are laid out differently. For 
> example, there is the settings app. On the iPad, you have everything down the 
> left for categories, and on the right as a category gets focused, you have 
> all the choices. So you don't have to move back and forward between so many 
> screens. Occasionally, an app will be more accessible on one platform or the 
> other. For example, the site app had been perfectly accessible on the iPad, 
> while on the phone it was not. Sadly this is no longer the case.
> If you like things like Netflix, the sound on the iPad being stereo, is 
> better than it is on the phone. I myself find that app difficult to use, so I 
> don't go there. But others do. But the biggest reason is simply that I don't 
> think I could do a day on an iPhone if I had to just use that device. The 
> battery would run out too soon.
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
> 
> On Nov 14, 2013, at 4:16 PM, "David Griffith" <d.griff...@btinternet.com> 
> wrote:
> 
>> As far as I can see there are no compelling reasons for a blind user to
>> require an iPad in addition to an iPhone, apart from possible better battery
>> life.
>> The physical size of the iPad makes the onscreen keyboard larger but a cheap
>> external Bluetooth keyboard   on an iPhone will give a better keyboard
>> experience anyway.
>> 
>> If however, you have some useful vision then the situation is completely
>> different and there are of course lots of advantages in having a bigger
>> display area to look at. As I am not in that category nobody has ever been
>> able to explain to me what advantage an iPad would have over an iPhone. At
>> the margins there is apparently a version of Quick Office on the iPad which
>> is accessible on that platform whilst it remains inaccessible on the iPhone.
>> However Pages will meet most word processing  needs and I do not routinely
>> use Spreadsheets on a mobile device.
>> 
>> So in essence the case for a blind user investing in an iPad in addition to
>> a phone seem very tenuous to me.
>> 
>> David Griffith
>> 
>> David Griffith
>> 
>> 
>> .
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: mac-access-boun...@mac-access.net
>> [mailto:mac-access-boun...@mac-access.net] On Behalf Of meadowlark77
>> Sent: 14 November 2013 23:40
>> To: Mac OSX & iOS Accessibility
>> Subject: advantage of an iPad over an iPhone?
>> 
>> Just curious. What could be the advantage, say, of an iPad mini overthe 
>> iPhone 5? I'm asking for a reason. I told somebody theother day that I use 
>> my iPhone like a computer, more than I do a phone. I told them i E-Mail, 
>> write files and so on and so on and so on. I take pictures, videos and so 
>> on. Their reply was, "you really need an iPad, so you don't have to use your
>> 
>> phone like that." But do I? If I do, why? What are the differences between 
>> the iPad and the iPhone 5?
>> 
>> Thanks,
>> 
>> Brenda
>> 
>> mailto:meadowlar...@cox.net 
>> 
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