I go back to the iPhone 3GS in October 2009 I've been using the iPhone ever 
cents and I never looked back I listen to a podcast by Shane Jackson I knew 
from listening to that podcast that this would be a good fit

Sent from my iPad

> On May 5, 2017, at 2:03 PM, christopher hallsworth <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> Hi this is interesting.
> 
> I discovered accessibility of iOS devices with the acquisition of the 4th 
> generation iPod Touch back in 2011. No sooner than six months later I 
> acquired my first iPhone, the 4. In 2014 I acquired my first iPad, the Mini 
> 2, and the rest is history. Today saw the acquisition of the Magic Keyboard, 
> so I can be more productive than ever on my iOS devices and other Apple 
> hardware.
> 
> 
> 
>> On 5 May 2017, at 17:25, Mário Gabriel <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> Yes, my autonomy with an iPhone, is much bigger than with a pc.
>> 
>> There is no other phone that offers most apps with the best accessibility 
>> guaranteed.
>> 
>> And in your own system, it is unbeatable.
>> at least for now...
>> 
>> I do not even spend more money on computers. Whether laptop, or desktop.
>> Instead, I spent money on new iPhone model every 4 years...
>> cheers.
>> Às 14:38 de 05/05/2017, Tom Lange escreveu:
>>> Back in early 2011 I went to work for an organization as an assistive 
>>> technology coordinator and lead instructor for one of its computer training 
>>> programs. I was using a Nokia phone with Talks at the time, which was 
>>> pretty limiting, and I used my laptop and PC's around the computer lab. My 
>>> coworker had an iPhone 4 and I always heard that thing chattering away 
>>> while she was walking around campus or in her office. We rode home together 
>>> on paratransit one day and I asked her if I could check out her phone. She 
>>> explained the basic VO gestures and I immediately began exploring. When we 
>>> dropped her off at her place I was convinced that I had to have the iPhone 
>>> 4. The following weekend I went to the AT&T store with my girlfriend 
>>> tagging along and I bought a phone for me and one for her. Since then I 
>>> loaded it up with all kinds of apps and am always on a quest for new apps 
>>> to make life a bit easier. Nowadays, after several phone upgrades I have 
>>> the 256GB iPhone 7 with roughly 200 apps for just about anything I'd want 
>>> to do. I rarely use my laptop at home for anything except heavy-duty word 
>>> processing and Excel; my iPhone does the rest. I still use the Braille 
>>> Sense U2 for note-taking and leisure reading, and, paired with the iPhone 
>>> it's a nearly unbeatable combination. I use the iPhone for e-mail, web 
>>> browsing, shopping, online banking, scanning and reading printed material 
>>> on the fly when I'm out and about, object identification, GPS navigation, 
>>> listening to podcasts and music, calendar management, using social media 
>>> and the list goes on. Now, if I could only get the darn thing to cook my 
>>> dinner and do the laundry I'd be set. But even  that is conceivable if 
>>> appliances  in my apartment were set up with the right gizmos and gadgets 
>>> and the iPhone could communicate with them. I'm always quick to tell my 
>>> students that the iPhone isn't the universal panacea, the be-all end-all 
>>> solution for making living with blindness easier, but I'd say it's a pretty 
>>> good start.
>>> 
>>> Sent from my iPhone 7
>>> 
>>>> On May 5, 2017, at 5:03 AM, Mário Gabriel <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Absolutely right!
>>>> It's my pc!
>>>> I do a lot more on the iPhone, than on any computer.
>>>> And now I bought an otterbox defender, wow, is fantastic!
>>>> Completely protected
>>>> 
>>>> My iPhone is my computer!
>>>> I do not even use windows anymore!
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Cheers.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> Às 07:32 de 05/05/2017, SoonerAnnie escreveu:
>>>>> I absolutely love my iPhone and don't know what I would do without it! I 
>>>>> have also convinced a few other totally blind friends...and also my twin 
>>>>> sister...to get one...and they don't know what they would do without them 
>>>>> either! I do everything on mine! It's like having a little computer in my 
>>>>> pocket or purse!
>>>>> 
>>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>>> 
>>>>>> On May 4, 2017, at 9:58 PM, Devin Prater <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I can't love a phone either. My computer, on the other hand, is really
>>>>>>   what I can put faith in.
>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Devin Prater
>>>>>> Sent from Discordia using Gnus for Emacs.
>>>>>> Email: [email protected]
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> "Jewel" <[email protected]> writes:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I, also, have an iPhone 5S, and I loathe the horrid thing, and that is 
>>>>>>> * not because I have made up my mind to do so. I would love to love it 
>>>>>>> as all the blind people that I know
>>>>>>> who have one are rapturous in its praises and tell me: hand on heart: 
>>>>>>> that life has never been so good, but believe that statement, I cannot!
>>>>>>> Jewel
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> From: Richard Turner
>>>>>>> Sent: Friday, May 05, 2017 1:37 AM
>>>>>>> To: [email protected]
>>>>>>> Subject: RE: 10 ways the iPhone changed everything
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I used to be the braille and adaptive device instructor at a State 
>>>>>>> Commission for the Blind. When I heard about the first accessible 
>>>>>>> iPhone, I started paying attention to see if
>>>>>>> they decided to make the iPod Touch accessible as at that time I had no 
>>>>>>> interest in a cell phone.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On November 20, 2009, I decided to go to the Apple store to check out 
>>>>>>> the new iPod Touch 3rd generation with VoiceOver.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I convinced the store to let me buy one with the understanding that if 
>>>>>>> I decided it wasn't right for our clients, or myself, that I could 
>>>>>>> return it with no "restocking fees."
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Needless to say, I did not return it.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I convinced my manager that we should start teaching clients how to use 
>>>>>>> it since it already did more than many other blindness specific 
>>>>>>> products and was considerably
>>>>>>> cheaper. I even bought an external GPS receiver/battery pack from Dual 
>>>>>>> Electronics and began using the Touch as an accessible GPS device.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Our office now supplies all the staff who have to travel with an iPhone 
>>>>>>> in place of the old Blackberries they used to use because of the 
>>>>>>> built-in accessibility.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I bought the iPhone 5s for myself when it came out as I finally decided 
>>>>>>> having a cell phone was a very good idea plus it meant I had a GPS 
>>>>>>> system without a bulky external
>>>>>>> device.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I now do most things on my iPhone and my iPod Touch 6th generation.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Thank you Steve Jobs.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Richard
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
>>>>>>> Behalf Of Esther Levegnale
>>>>>>> Sent: Thursday, May 4, 2017 6:03 AM
>>>>>>> To: [email protected]
>>>>>>> Subject: Re: 10 ways the iPhone changed everything
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Hi, Everyone!
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The iPhone has certainly made a huge difference in my life. My Apple 
>>>>>>> experience started back on February 6, 2012, when I walked into the 
>>>>>>> Apple Store at the West Farms
>>>>>>> Mall in West Hartford, CT, and bought an iPod Touch. Because I had a 
>>>>>>> very bad experience with a touch-screen device before then that was 
>>>>>>> meant for blind people, I decided
>>>>>>> to buy an iPod first in order for me to reacquaint myself with a touch 
>>>>>>> screen. Well, let me tell you. It didn't take me long to get used to 
>>>>>>> the iPod Touch. I was emailing the day
>>>>>>> after I bought the device, and then the following November I took the 
>>>>>>> plunge and bought the iPhone 5. The rest is history.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I do almost everything on my phone and I absolutely love it.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> It felt wonderful to walk into that Apple Store and buy the same thing 
>>>>>>> that everyone else buys rather than spending money to buy only adaptive 
>>>>>>> products for the blind.
>>>>>>> Believe me, I'm not knocking these blindness-related devices and, in 
>>>>>>> fact, they are wonderful too, but it was so wonderful when I heard 
>>>>>>> VoiceOver speak for the first time in
>>>>>>> the store when the salesperson activated it for me.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Anyway, that's my story about my Apple experience. I also switched from 
>>>>>>> a Dell computer over to an Apple MacBook Air.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Take care everyone!
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Esther Levegnale
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Sent From Esther's Amazing and Awesome iPhone 7+!
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On May 4, 2017, at 8:38 AM, Bill Gallik <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> In 2007 I purchased a Trekker/Maestro for $2,000 among other assistive 
>>>>>>> technology devices (i.e., Note Reader II, etc.). At that time I 
>>>>>>> composed an e-mail to one of the
>>>>>>> various blindness-oriented e-mail lists suggesting how nice it would be 
>>>>>>> if a single device could support all the various aspects of assistive 
>>>>>>> technology. Little did I know
>>>>>>> that such a device was being initially released by Apple - the iPhone. 
>>>>>>> I wished I had that $2000 and waited for what coming; it is truly 
>>>>>>> amazing and definitely life
>>>>>>> changing!
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> ****************
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> - Bill
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> - "Confutatis maledictis, flammis acribus addictis."
>>>>>>> - Translation: to "The damned and accursed are consigned to the flames 
>>>>>>> of hell."
>>>>>>> - Mozart's Requiem, "Confutatis Maledictis"
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On May 3, 2017, at 1:28 AM, M. Taylor <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> CNET: 10 ways the iPhone changed everything
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Ten years ago, Nokia was the world's largest phone maker. Microsoft was
>>>>>>> gearing up to launch Windows Vista. And the best new products at CES
>>>>>>> included a wireless TV and an MP3 player that streamed internet radio.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Then, on Jan. 9, 2007, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled a device that went 
>>>>>>> on
>>>>>>> to change the world -- a $499 iPhone that came with 4GB of storage. It 
>>>>>>> was a
>>>>>>> mobile phone, a music player and an Internet device.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> "iPhone is a revolutionary and magical product that is literally five 
>>>>>>> years
>>>>>>> ahead of any other mobile phone," Jobs said at the time.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Since then, Apple has sold more than 1.2 billion iPhones and has become 
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> most profitable public company in the world. Copycat phones from 
>>>>>>> companies
>>>>>>> like Samsung, HTC, Motorola and Xiaomi proliferated across the globe, 
>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>> now even people in places without steady electricity have smartphones.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> "It's difficult to understate [the iPhone's] impact," Reticle Research
>>>>>>> analyst Ross Rubin said. "The ripples it has created affect wide swaths 
>>>>>>> of
>>>>>>> our lives."
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Here are some ways the iPhone has changed the way we live:
>>>>>>> 1. We're always on
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> It used to be you'd fire up your computer, wait for your Wi-Fi to 
>>>>>>> connect
>>>>>>> (or your dialup connection, if we're going wayyy back) and open Internet
>>>>>>> Explorer, Safari or some other web browser. Now you're connected to the
>>>>>>> internet all the time. If you're not on Wi-Fi, you're linked through 
>>>>>>> your
>>>>>>> cellular network.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> It's not just inescapable connectivity that the iPhone helped bring 
>>>>>>> about.
>>>>>>> It's also how we actually access the internet. The iPhone made mobile 
>>>>>>> web
>>>>>>> browsing useful for the first time. Every other mobile web browser 
>>>>>>> before
>>>>>>> that was painful, in the words of CNET's Kent German. Soon came a flood 
>>>>>>> of
>>>>>>> apps, which removed the need to open a web browser at all.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 2. Tablets, watches and headphones, oh my
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Multiple devices are either tied to the iPhone or exist because the 
>>>>>>> phone
>>>>>>> was created. There's the iPad, essentially a larger iPhone you use at 
>>>>>>> home.
>>>>>>> And there's the Apple Watch, which is tethered to the iPhone.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Then there are all the accessories spurred by the popularity of the 
>>>>>>> iPhone,
>>>>>>> like phone cases; Bluetooth speakers and headphones; and charging 
>>>>>>> docks. ABI
>>>>>>> Research estimates that revenue in the global mobile accessories market 
>>>>>>> will
>>>>>>> top $110 billion in 2021.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> "Given users' attachment to their smartphones and their wants and needs 
>>>>>>> to
>>>>>>> personalize and protect them, the aftermarket mobile accessories market 
>>>>>>> is
>>>>>>> showing no signs of slowing down," ABI analyst Marina Lu said.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 3. The key to happiness
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> You may not remember this now, but Apple's first iPhone didn't have 
>>>>>>> such a
>>>>>>> thing as third-party apps or the App Store. That changed in July 2008, 
>>>>>>> when
>>>>>>> Apple introduced the iPhone 3G and its iPhone 2.0 software.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The App Store is what made the iPhone a must-have device. There are now 
>>>>>>> more
>>>>>>> than 2 million apps in the App Store, with essentially every company 
>>>>>>> making
>>>>>>> one or more apps. And the iPhone and App Store have spawned industries 
>>>>>>> that
>>>>>>> couldn't exist without smartphones. There'd be no Uber or Lyft to 
>>>>>>> shuttle us
>>>>>>> from place to place, for instance, or Instagram or Snapchat for sharing 
>>>>>>> our
>>>>>>> photos.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 4. Everyone's a shutterbug
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Sure, we had cameras on our phones before the iPhone. But the Apple 
>>>>>>> gadget's
>>>>>>> combination of easy internet access and apps like Instagram inspired
>>>>>>> people's inner photographer.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> As a result, lugging around an actual camera became redundant.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> "We as a species take more pictures than we ever had in the past by an 
>>>>>>> order
>>>>>>> of magnitude," Current Analysis analyst Avi Greengart said.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 5. Livin' live
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The phone's camera also means you have a portable camcorder (remember
>>>>>>> those?) at your fingertips. And on top of that, the phone's connection 
>>>>>>> lets
>>>>>>> you broadcast video immediately. That could mean talking to your family
>>>>>>> members on the other side of the country or shooting a cat video for
>>>>>>> YouTube. Or, thanks to services like Facebook Live or Periscope, the
>>>>>>> technology can be used for filming police brutality or instantly 
>>>>>>> reporting
>>>>>>> something you've seen.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On the flip side, having these smart devices on us at all times lets law
>>>>>>> enforcement and corporations (like the makers of those apps on your 
>>>>>>> phone)
>>>>>>> track us. Apple has taken a strong stance on privacy, but security 
>>>>>>> remains a
>>>>>>> big concern for users.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 6. Putting the digits in digital
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Touchscreens once were rare. Now babies are swiping at TVs and 
>>>>>>> wondering why
>>>>>>> the screen doesn't change. Interactive screens are in virtually 
>>>>>>> everything,
>>>>>>> even refrigerators. When Jobs introduced the iPhone, he said, "We are 
>>>>>>> all
>>>>>>> born with the ultimate pointing device -- our fingers -- and iPhone uses
>>>>>>> them to create the most revolutionary user interface since the mouse."
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> He was more right than he could imagine. The appeal of a touchscreen 
>>>>>>> phone
>>>>>>> forced Microsoft to embrace touch in its software and get its hardware
>>>>>>> partners to make touchscreen phones, tablets and computers.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> It's almost surprising to see a device today without a touchscreen 
>>>>>>> (though
>>>>>>> Apple maintains it won't be putting touchscreens in its Mac computers).
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 7. You are here
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The introduction of mapping on the iPhone meant you no longer had to 
>>>>>>> feel
>>>>>>> like an embarrassed tourist in a new city, clutching a giant paper map 
>>>>>>> on
>>>>>>> the street corner. Google Maps and Apple Maps are two of the most-used 
>>>>>>> apps
>>>>>>> on the iPhone, and they've steadily added features over the years, like
>>>>>>> public transit directions.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The first iPhone had only 4GB of storage.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 8. Gaming goes to the next level
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> The iPhone reinvented the idea of mobile gaming. Apps like Angry Birds, 
>>>>>>> that
>>>>>>> anyone could play using their fingers on the touchscreen, became hugely
>>>>>>> popular, and payment models changed. Many games are now free to play --
>>>>>>> instead of charging a sales price, developers came up with the idea of
>>>>>>> in-app purchases, which let you pay for new levels and features as you 
>>>>>>> go.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Seven of the top 10 grossing iPhone apps are games, like Pokemon Go,
>>>>>>> according to market tracker App Annie.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 9. Cash ain't king
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Apple wasn't the first company to talk about mobile payments, but it did
>>>>>>> make even your grandma aware of the technology, which lets you use your
>>>>>>> phone to purchase things. Goodbye, cash. Hello, iPhone. The iPhone's 
>>>>>>> Wallet
>>>>>>> app also can store retail coupons, reward cards, and passes for flights 
>>>>>>> and
>>>>>>> movies, all in one place.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Cash isn't dead yet -- there still are many places that don't take 
>>>>>>> mobile
>>>>>>> payments -- but using your phone at the checkout stand is more common 
>>>>>>> than
>>>>>>> ever.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 10. But wait -- there's more
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> There's no way to sum up all that the iPhone did in just 10 points. So
>>>>>>> here's a grab bag of additional stuff.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Apple basically killed Adobe Flash on mobile devices and made endless
>>>>>>> scrolling a very good thing. You never have to carry a calculator or
>>>>>>> flashlight anymore, and visual voicemail lets you easily skip forward 
>>>>>>> in a
>>>>>>> meandering message. Podcasts mean you don't have to listen to the radio 
>>>>>>> in
>>>>>>> real time -- and they give you new options, such as the hit show 
>>>>>>> "Serial."
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Social media has also shifted heavily to mobile devices from desktop
>>>>>>> computers, letting people feel connected to friends at all times. 
>>>>>>> Facebook
>>>>>>> said that in its most recent quarter, roughly 84 percent of its $6.82
>>>>>>> billion in ad revenue came from mobile ads.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> At the same time, the iPhone has been linked to the rise in
>>>>>>> attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and short attention spans in 
>>>>>>> kids.
>>>>>>> Governments use mobile devices to spy on their citizens, and consumers 
>>>>>>> give
>>>>>>> up a lot of personal information in exchange for services like Uber 
>>>>>>> rides.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> But even with the negatives, don't try to take someone's iPhone away.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Original Article at:
>>>>>>> https://www.cnet.com/news/apple-iphone-ipad-q2-2017-earnings-revenue/
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Mark
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> -- 
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