Well now,  Hold your horses, smiles.

2 grand is too much for this baby.  No doubt about it.  There are serious 
drawbacks that need to be addressed.  The manual is horrendous The mac software 
isn't integrated with the mac and tries to be windowsish apparently.  The 
actual windows software has been crashing like crazy here, but that's in my 
virtual machine, where a lot of things don't exactly play ball.  It's a testing 
ground for anything and everything and I'd take my crashing issues to a couple 
of actual windows pc's before I really worried about them.  The unfortunate 
thing about the crashes from my standpoint is that I can't show the unit to a 
client if that's what it's going to do .

Now having said all that, we've got a couple of off the shelf solutions for the 
mac for around a hundred bucks.  You know what?  They suck.  I know a few 
really ambitious people on this list have gotten it to fly for them, and that's 
great, but a fare few of us here are high end computer users.  You've got to 
realize, The vast majority of blind people are over the age of 60.  They have 
interests and poppies and things they like to do and a computer is a great help 
to them, but they can't be having to worry about hardware compatibility, and 
they don't want 5 or 6 steps and 3 programs to do a simple scan and read.  I'm 
not gonna take them through image capture, then fine reader, then text edit, 
only to find out that what they scanned didn't OCR properly.  The first time 
that happens I'll lose my audience.  You've got to face the fact that there is 
nothing for OCR on the mac that is simple as openbook or kurzweil, and you've 
especially got to face up to the fact that there's no one program on the mac 
that has as many features in one place as either of those two packages.

For two grand, EyePal doesn't support enough languages.  It's not integrated 
with all the services like RFB&D and bookshare.  It doesn't have a spell check, 
dictionary or thesaurus.  it doesn't read currency.  It doesn't have automatic 
calibration features that will optimize the camera settings for the particular 
text you are reading, lighting conditions and so on.

What it does do, is handle large books really and I mean really well.  It will 
allow my elderly mac-wealding clients to walk up, put down a document, hit a 
button and find out what's on the paper just like my windows clients can.  Is 
that worth 2 grand?  I'm not convinced, but I'm not ready to writhe it off 
until I get to see current software working on a real platform of my choosing.  
Meanwhile,  I suggest you pour yourself another cup of coffee and mellow out.  
I know exactly how you feel.  I felt the same way when the original knfb reader 
came out.  Now that product is a stone-age brick and I could probably have one 
for $500 if I asked around.  I'll tell you what though.  I got those so and 
so's right where it hurt.  You know what I did with there $3600 piece of 
astonishingly portable, nice-looking and effective technology?  Oh ho ho you'll 
never believe this...  I left it in the store.  *rubs hands together with glee* 
 That showed 'em.  Now I've been working in AT for almost 3 years, all be it on 
the very bottom most rung of the ladder, and It's not like it was 10 years ago. 
 They're still charging stupid amounts of money for high end screen readers and 
braille displays, mostly because it's tradition.  They can charge it and people 
are paying, so you can't very well blame them.  Newer technologies though are 
subject to the same laws of depreciation as every other damn thing.  EyePal 
pricing just dropped in December.  I'm hoping that applies to canadian sales as 
well.  Next year it will go down again.  The year after that, abisee will 
introduce something else and you'll be able to have one of these for a fraction 
of the cost.  The market is going a certain way that will eventually freeze out 
gouging prices for access technology, but change is slow and you just have to 
pace yourself and not let it rip you up so much.

Take 'er easy.

Erik Burggraaf
User support consultant,
Now posting occasionally on twitter at eburggraaf,
1-888-255-5194
http://www.erik-burggraaf.com

On 2010-12-11, at 7:19 PM, Yuma Decaux wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> Just wanted to jump in on this, but 2000 dollars for a demo? I mean, crashing 
> and all, missing manuals or software and a total lack of anything integrated? 
> How come it's that ridiculously priced? It's actually the price of two 
> macbook airs, and i thought apple was going premium with their stuff. I 
> understand the cost of manufacture/quantity of sale/specialization of the 
> device but 2k for something like that is basically laughing at the blind 
> man's difficulties and adding more fuel to the fire.
> 
> Sorry for my language but i cannot comprehend the level of anger mustering 
> out of me in regards to these so called accessiblity solutions when all it 
> does is one function, and not even that great as i read on this thred.
> 
> Shaking my head in complete disgust 
> 
> 
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