Re: Using LookTel Money Reader for the first time [was Re: Strange behaviour with money reader.]

2012-01-20 Thread krystal watson
yes you do unfortuantly need to ree purtches it for iphone as the one you have 
is a mac version only its different its  design for the mac only sorry about 
that i had to do the same thing with bento smiles 
On 20/01/2012, at 11:14 PM, Michael Busboom wrote:

 Hello Esther and others,
 
 Esther, your explanation was super, but I am having a totally different issue:
 
 While on my Mac, I went to the MacStore and purchased the aforementioned 
 Money Reader.  It works great on my Mac.  Do I need to purchase the money 
 Reader a second time if I want a copy for my iPhone 4?  If not, how do I get 
 the app onto my iPhone?  Although I have synchronized my iPhone with my Mac, 
 the app is not on my iPhone.
 
 Many thanks,
 
 Mike
 
 On 19,Jan,2012, at 5:11 PM, Esther wrote:
 
 Hello Sadam,
 
 When LookTel Money Reader starts up, the camera on your iPhone is 
 immediately activated.  There's maybe a 3 or 4 second pause before you hear 
 Money Reader Running.  Once you get that message, any bills that are 
 placed within view of your iPhone camera, and in sufficient light, will 
 automatically be identified.  I typically hold my iPhone 4 camera between 4 
 to 6 inches from the bills, for all currency (including Australian dollars). 
  On the iPhone 4, and I believe this is also true for the iPhone 4S, the 
 light on the camera will automatically come on if there is insufficient 
 light to identify the bill.  (This is not true for the iPhone 3GS -- you 
 must first check that there is adequate lighting.)
 
 If you have not had any success with using this app, try the following: 
 Place your bills in a flat stack in your left hand with the iPhone lying on 
 top of them.  The iPhone is in the normal orientation for use if you picked 
 it up -- the touch screen is toward you and the home button is at the 
 bottom.  The long direction of the bills lies along the long direction of 
 the iPhone, and the width of the bills is only slightly wider than the 
 iPhone.  You can have everything centered and lying flat on the palm of your 
 hand.  (If you are left handed you can make the same arrangement with your 
 right hand.)
 
 Now, simply pick up the iPhone by gripping the sides of the device with your 
 other hand, and lift it straight up from the palm of your hand about 4 or 5 
 inches.  You should hear the app announce the amount, e.g., 10 dollars.  
 VoiceOver will continue to repeat the denomination of the bill in the camera 
 view.  You can also use the app on bills that are on a flat surface, but I 
 find it is easier to get a sense of the height and position if you first try 
 this by holding iPhone in one hand and the laying the bills flat in the palm 
 of your other hand.  You can try moving the hand that holds the iPhone to 
 different heights, and feel what's most comfortable for you, and how quickly 
 the app responds to identifying the currency. 
 
 OCR apps work best when you hold the camera fairly steady, at whatever 
 height you raise it to, so when you experiment, first move to a position, 
 then keep your hand in that position while the app runs. LookTel Money 
 Reader should be able to identify currency regardless of which side of the 
 bill is facing the camera, and it works fairly fast (e.g. tenths of 
 seconds), so it will do pretty well even if you don't hold the iPhone camera 
 steady.  (However, you shouldn't try to deliberately wave the camera around 
 so that it is never able to focus well on the money.) 
 
 Since the app reads whatever currency is in the camera view, it's best to 
 have only one bill visible at a time -- e.g. fanning out a number of bills 
 with different denominations will only confuse things.  You could place a 
 stack of bills under the camera, then remove the top bill one by one, or you 
 could simply place a sequence single bills under the view of the camera.
 
 Incidentally, LookTel money reader will read out currencies whether or not 
 VoiceOver is running.  It uses different voices for the different 
 currencies, and they're just different from the VoiceOver voices.  If you 
 want to have the bills identified by tones instead of announcement (for more 
 privacy), turn on the mute switch (along the left side of your iPhone, near 
 the top -- it's the rectangular switch that you activate by pushing down.)  
 You'll hear tones with different pitches.  One dollar will be a single, low 
 tone.  Five dollars will be three low tones.  Ten dollars is a single, high 
 tone.  Twenty is two high tones, etc.
 
 HTH.  Cheers,
 
 Esther
 
 
 On Jan 19, 2012, at 03:42, Sadam Ahmed wrote:
 
 Hi all, today I downloaded  the money reader app on my iPhone 4S. 
 Unfortunately when I run the app all I'm getting from voice-over is money 
 reader running. All efforts to get information by taking a picture of a  
 $20 Australian bill have failed. Is there something I'm missing here. Maybe 
 someone can give me a hand with this one? Thank you kind regards.
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 --- Mac 

Re: Using LookTel Money Reader for the first time [was Re: Strange behaviour with money reader.]

2012-01-20 Thread Esther
Hi Mike,

The LookTel Money Reader app for the Mac and the version for iOS devices are 
two separate items, and have to be purchased separately.  One uses the camera 
built into your computer, and the other uses the camera built into your iPhone, 
iPod Touch, or iPad.  These have different machine architectures, different 
auto-focus and machine lighting controls, and different camera resolutions.  
So, yes, the LookTel Money Reader application from the Mac App store is 
separate from version of the LookTel Money Reader app from the App Store for 
your iOS device, and must be purchased separately.  These versions don't always 
work equally well; I quite like Prizmo OCR on my iPhone, but wouldn't recommend 
the version of Prizmo in the Mac App store, at least not for visually impaired 
users.

Here's the link to the iOS version of LookTel Money Reader:
• LookTel Money Reader ($9.99) by IPPLEX
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/looktel-money-reader/id417476558?mt=8

I also meant to remind people that the camera on the app stays active until you 
actually quit the application by pressing the Home button to return to your 
home screen.  You can use it with the screen curtain on, however.

HTH.  Cheers,

Esther


On Jan 20, 2012, at 02:14, Michael Busboom wrote:

 Hello Esther and others,
 
 Esther, your explanation was super, but I am having a totally different issue:
 
 While on my Mac, I went to the MacStore and purchased the aforementioned 
 Money Reader.  It works great on my Mac.  Do I need to purchase the money 
 Reader a second time if I want a copy for my iPhone 4?  If not, how do I get 
 the app onto my iPhone?  Although I have synchronized my iPhone with my Mac, 
 the app is not on my iPhone.
 
 Many thanks,
 
 Mike
 
 On 19,Jan,2012, at 5:11 PM, Esther wrote:
 
 Hello Sadam,
 
 When LookTel Money Reader starts up, the camera on your iPhone is 
 immediately activated.  There's maybe a 3 or 4 second pause before you hear 
 Money Reader Running.  Once you get that message, any bills that are 
 placed within view of your iPhone camera, and in sufficient light, will 
 automatically be identified.  I typically hold my iPhone 4 camera between 4 
 to 6 inches from the bills, for all currency (including Australian dollars). 
  On the iPhone 4, and I believe this is also true for the iPhone 4S, the 
 light on the camera will automatically come on if there is insufficient 
 light to identify the bill.  (This is not true for the iPhone 3GS -- you 
 must first check that there is adequate lighting.)
 
 If you have not had any success with using this app, try the following: 
 Place your bills in a flat stack in your left hand with the iPhone lying on 
 top of them.  The iPhone is in the normal orientation for use if you picked 
 it up -- the touch screen is toward you and the home button is at the 
 bottom.  The long direction of the bills lies along the long direction of 
 the iPhone, and the width of the bills is only slightly wider than the 
 iPhone.  You can have everything centered and lying flat on the palm of your 
 hand.  (If you are left handed you can make the same arrangement with your 
 right hand.)
 
 Now, simply pick up the iPhone by gripping the sides of the device with your 
 other hand, and lift it straight up from the palm of your hand about 4 or 5 
 inches.  You should hear the app announce the amount, e.g., 10 dollars.  
 VoiceOver will continue to repeat the denomination of the bill in the camera 
 view.  You can also use the app on bills that are on a flat surface, but I 
 find it is easier to get a sense of the height and position if you first try 
 this by holding iPhone in one hand and the laying the bills flat in the palm 
 of your other hand.  You can try moving the hand that holds the iPhone to 
 different heights, and feel what's most comfortable for you, and how quickly 
 the app responds to identifying the currency. 
 
 OCR apps work best when you hold the camera fairly steady, at whatever 
 height you raise it to, so when you experiment, first move to a position, 
 then keep your hand in that position while the app runs. LookTel Money 
 Reader should be able to identify currency regardless of which side of the 
 bill is facing the camera, and it works fairly fast (e.g. tenths of 
 seconds), so it will do pretty well even if you don't hold the iPhone camera 
 steady.  (However, you shouldn't try to deliberately wave the camera around 
 so that it is never able to focus well on the money.) 
 
 Since the app reads whatever currency is in the camera view, it's best to 
 have only one bill visible at a time -- e.g. fanning out a number of bills 
 with different denominations will only confuse things.  You could place a 
 stack of bills under the camera, then remove the top bill one by one, or you 
 could simply place a sequence single bills under the view of the camera.
 
 Incidentally, LookTel money reader will read out currencies whether or not 
 VoiceOver is running.  It uses different 

Using LookTel Money Reader for the first time [was Re: Strange behaviour with money reader.]

2012-01-19 Thread Esther
Hello Sadam,

When LookTel Money Reader starts up, the camera on your iPhone is immediately 
activated.  There's maybe a 3 or 4 second pause before you hear Money Reader 
Running.  Once you get that message, any bills that are placed within view of 
your iPhone camera, and in sufficient light, will automatically be identified.  
I typically hold my iPhone 4 camera between 4 to 6 inches from the bills, for 
all currency (including Australian dollars).  On the iPhone 4, and I believe 
this is also true for the iPhone 4S, the light on the camera will automatically 
come on if there is insufficient light to identify the bill.  (This is not true 
for the iPhone 3GS -- you must first check that there is adequate lighting.)

If you have not had any success with using this app, try the following: Place 
your bills in a flat stack in your left hand with the iPhone lying on top of 
them.  The iPhone is in the normal orientation for use if you picked it up -- 
the touch screen is toward you and the home button is at the bottom.  The long 
direction of the bills lies along the long direction of the iPhone, and the 
width of the bills is only slightly wider than the iPhone.  You can have 
everything centered and lying flat on the palm of your hand.  (If you are left 
handed you can make the same arrangement with your right hand.)

Now, simply pick up the iPhone by gripping the sides of the device with your 
other hand, and lift it straight up from the palm of your hand about 4 or 5 
inches.  You should hear the app announce the amount, e.g., 10 dollars.  
VoiceOver will continue to repeat the denomination of the bill in the camera 
view.  You can also use the app on bills that are on a flat surface, but I find 
it is easier to get a sense of the height and position if you first try this by 
holding iPhone in one hand and the laying the bills flat in the palm of your 
other hand.  You can try moving the hand that holds the iPhone to different 
heights, and feel what's most comfortable for you, and how quickly the app 
responds to identifying the currency. 

OCR apps work best when you hold the camera fairly steady, at whatever height 
you raise it to, so when you experiment, first move to a position, then keep 
your hand in that position while the app runs. LookTel Money Reader should be 
able to identify currency regardless of which side of the bill is facing the 
camera, and it works fairly fast (e.g. tenths of seconds), so it will do pretty 
well even if you don't hold the iPhone camera steady.  (However, you shouldn't 
try to deliberately wave the camera around so that it is never able to focus 
well on the money.) 

Since the app reads whatever currency is in the camera view, it's best to have 
only one bill visible at a time -- e.g. fanning out a number of bills with 
different denominations will only confuse things.  You could place a stack of 
bills under the camera, then remove the top bill one by one, or you could 
simply place a sequence single bills under the view of the camera.

Incidentally, LookTel money reader will read out currencies whether or not 
VoiceOver is running.  It uses different voices for the different currencies, 
and they're just different from the VoiceOver voices.  If you want to have the 
bills identified by tones instead of announcement (for more privacy), turn on 
the mute switch (along the left side of your iPhone, near the top -- it's the 
rectangular switch that you activate by pushing down.)  You'll hear tones with 
different pitches.  One dollar will be a single, low tone.  Five dollars will 
be three low tones.  Ten dollars is a single, high tone.  Twenty is two high 
tones, etc.

HTH.  Cheers,

Esther


On Jan 19, 2012, at 03:42, Sadam Ahmed wrote:

 Hi all, today I downloaded  the money reader app on my iPhone 4S. 
 Unfortunately when I run the app all I'm getting from voice-over is money 
 reader running. All efforts to get information by taking a picture of a  $20 
 Australian bill have failed. Is there something I'm missing here. Maybe 
 someone can give me a hand with this one? Thank you kind regards.
 
 Sent from my iPhone

--- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net ---

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Re: Using LookTel Money Reader for the first time [was Re: Strange behaviour with money reader.]

2012-01-19 Thread Sadam Ahmed
Thanks for those tips. :) 

Sent from my iPhone

On 20/01/2012, at 3:11 AM, Esther mori...@mac.com wrote:

 Hello Sadam,
 
 When LookTel Money Reader starts up, the camera on your iPhone is immediately 
 activated.  There's maybe a 3 or 4 second pause before you hear Money Reader 
 Running.  Once you get that message, any bills that are placed within view 
 of your iPhone camera, and in sufficient light, will automatically be 
 identified.  I typically hold my iPhone 4 camera between 4 to 6 inches from 
 the bills, for all currency (including Australian dollars).  On the iPhone 4, 
 and I believe this is also true for the iPhone 4S, the light on the camera 
 will automatically come on if there is insufficient light to identify the 
 bill.  (This is not true for the iPhone 3GS -- you must first check that 
 there is adequate lighting.)
 
 If you have not had any success with using this app, try the following: Place 
 your bills in a flat stack in your left hand with the iPhone lying on top of 
 them.  The iPhone is in the normal orientation for use if you picked it up -- 
 the touch screen is toward you and the home button is at the bottom.  The 
 long direction of the bills lies along the long direction of the iPhone, and 
 the width of the bills is only slightly wider than the iPhone.  You can have 
 everything centered and lying flat on the palm of your hand.  (If you are 
 left handed you can make the same arrangement with your right hand.)
 
 Now, simply pick up the iPhone by gripping the sides of the device with your 
 other hand, and lift it straight up from the palm of your hand about 4 or 5 
 inches.  You should hear the app announce the amount, e.g., 10 dollars.  
 VoiceOver will continue to repeat the denomination of the bill in the camera 
 view.  You can also use the app on bills that are on a flat surface, but I 
 find it is easier to get a sense of the height and position if you first try 
 this by holding iPhone in one hand and the laying the bills flat in the palm 
 of your other hand.  You can try moving the hand that holds the iPhone to 
 different heights, and feel what's most comfortable for you, and how quickly 
 the app responds to identifying the currency. 
 
 OCR apps work best when you hold the camera fairly steady, at whatever height 
 you raise it to, so when you experiment, first move to a position, then keep 
 your hand in that position while the app runs. LookTel Money Reader should be 
 able to identify currency regardless of which side of the bill is facing the 
 camera, and it works fairly fast (e.g. tenths of seconds), so it will do 
 pretty well even if you don't hold the iPhone camera steady.  (However, you 
 shouldn't try to deliberately wave the camera around so that it is never able 
 to focus well on the money.) 
 
 Since the app reads whatever currency is in the camera view, it's best to 
 have only one bill visible at a time -- e.g. fanning out a number of bills 
 with different denominations will only confuse things.  You could place a 
 stack of bills under the camera, then remove the top bill one by one, or you 
 could simply place a sequence single bills under the view of the camera.
 
 Incidentally, LookTel money reader will read out currencies whether or not 
 VoiceOver is running.  It uses different voices for the different currencies, 
 and they're just different from the VoiceOver voices.  If you want to have 
 the bills identified by tones instead of announcement (for more privacy), 
 turn on the mute switch (along the left side of your iPhone, near the top -- 
 it's the rectangular switch that you activate by pushing down.)  You'll hear 
 tones with different pitches.  One dollar will be a single, low tone.  Five 
 dollars will be three low tones.  Ten dollars is a single, high tone.  Twenty 
 is two high tones, etc.
 
 HTH.  Cheers,
 
 Esther
 
 
 On Jan 19, 2012, at 03:42, Sadam Ahmed wrote:
 
 Hi all, today I downloaded  the money reader app on my iPhone 4S. 
 Unfortunately when I run the app all I'm getting from voice-over is money 
 reader running. All efforts to get information by taking a picture of a  $20 
 Australian bill have failed. Is there something I'm missing here. Maybe 
 someone can give me a hand with this one? Thank you kind regards.
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 --- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net ---
 
 To reply to this post, please address your message to 
 mac-access@mac-access.net
 
 You can find an archive of all messages postedto the Mac-Access forum at 
 either the list's own dedicated web archive:
 http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/mac-access/index.html
 or at the public Mail Archive:
 http://www.mail-archive.com/mac-access@mac-access.net/.
 Subscribe to the list's RSS feed from:
 http://www.mail-archive.com/mac-access@mac-access.net/maillist.xml
 
 The Mac-Access mailing list is guaranteed malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and 
 worm-free!
 
 Please remember to update your membership options periodically by visiting 
 the 

Re: Using LookTel Money Reader for the first time [was Re: Strange behaviour with money reader.]

2012-01-19 Thread krystal watson
thanks for the tips and nicely explained will help me to you could be a teacher 
you do explain things well so people can understand them smiles its straight to 
the point with good words not big words that are hard to know what they mean 
nice job smiles 
On 20/01/2012, at 3:26 AM, Sadam Ahmed wrote:

 Thanks for those tips. :) 
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 On 20/01/2012, at 3:11 AM, Esther mori...@mac.com wrote:
 
 Hello Sadam,
 
 When LookTel Money Reader starts up, the camera on your iPhone is 
 immediately activated.  There's maybe a 3 or 4 second pause before you hear 
 Money Reader Running.  Once you get that message, any bills that are 
 placed within view of your iPhone camera, and in sufficient light, will 
 automatically be identified.  I typically hold my iPhone 4 camera between 4 
 to 6 inches from the bills, for all currency (including Australian dollars). 
  On the iPhone 4, and I believe this is also true for the iPhone 4S, the 
 light on the camera will automatically come on if there is insufficient 
 light to identify the bill.  (This is not true for the iPhone 3GS -- you 
 must first check that there is adequate lighting.)
 
 If you have not had any success with using this app, try the following: 
 Place your bills in a flat stack in your left hand with the iPhone lying on 
 top of them.  The iPhone is in the normal orientation for use if you picked 
 it up -- the touch screen is toward you and the home button is at the 
 bottom.  The long direction of the bills lies along the long direction of 
 the iPhone, and the width of the bills is only slightly wider than the 
 iPhone.  You can have everything centered and lying flat on the palm of your 
 hand.  (If you are left handed you can make the same arrangement with your 
 right hand.)
 
 Now, simply pick up the iPhone by gripping the sides of the device with your 
 other hand, and lift it straight up from the palm of your hand about 4 or 5 
 inches.  You should hear the app announce the amount, e.g., 10 dollars.  
 VoiceOver will continue to repeat the denomination of the bill in the camera 
 view.  You can also use the app on bills that are on a flat surface, but I 
 find it is easier to get a sense of the height and position if you first try 
 this by holding iPhone in one hand and the laying the bills flat in the palm 
 of your other hand.  You can try moving the hand that holds the iPhone to 
 different heights, and feel what's most comfortable for you, and how quickly 
 the app responds to identifying the currency. 
 
 OCR apps work best when you hold the camera fairly steady, at whatever 
 height you raise it to, so when you experiment, first move to a position, 
 then keep your hand in that position while the app runs. LookTel Money 
 Reader should be able to identify currency regardless of which side of the 
 bill is facing the camera, and it works fairly fast (e.g. tenths of 
 seconds), so it will do pretty well even if you don't hold the iPhone camera 
 steady.  (However, you shouldn't try to deliberately wave the camera around 
 so that it is never able to focus well on the money.) 
 
 Since the app reads whatever currency is in the camera view, it's best to 
 have only one bill visible at a time -- e.g. fanning out a number of bills 
 with different denominations will only confuse things.  You could place a 
 stack of bills under the camera, then remove the top bill one by one, or you 
 could simply place a sequence single bills under the view of the camera.
 
 Incidentally, LookTel money reader will read out currencies whether or not 
 VoiceOver is running.  It uses different voices for the different 
 currencies, and they're just different from the VoiceOver voices.  If you 
 want to have the bills identified by tones instead of announcement (for more 
 privacy), turn on the mute switch (along the left side of your iPhone, near 
 the top -- it's the rectangular switch that you activate by pushing down.)  
 You'll hear tones with different pitches.  One dollar will be a single, low 
 tone.  Five dollars will be three low tones.  Ten dollars is a single, high 
 tone.  Twenty is two high tones, etc.
 
 HTH.  Cheers,
 
 Esther
 
 
 On Jan 19, 2012, at 03:42, Sadam Ahmed wrote:
 
 Hi all, today I downloaded  the money reader app on my iPhone 4S. 
 Unfortunately when I run the app all I'm getting from voice-over is money 
 reader running. All efforts to get information by taking a picture of a  
 $20 Australian bill have failed. Is there something I'm missing here. Maybe 
 someone can give me a hand with this one? Thank you kind regards.
 
 Sent from my iPhone
 
 --- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net ---
 
 To reply to this post, please address your message to 
 mac-access@mac-access.net
 
 You can find an archive of all messages postedto the Mac-Access forum at 
 either the list's own dedicated web archive:
 http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/mac-access/index.html
 or at the public Mail Archive: