Moderated Re: pros and cons of Braille display


Van Lant, Robin
 

I can see the benefit of routing the cursor right to where you want it. I find I’m often arrowing back to hear a spelling of a word when proof-reading my work. 

 

If you are in Excel, does the display show you just the contents of the cell you have focus on?

 

 

 

 

From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Richard Turner
Sent: Friday, April 23, 2021 2:29 PM
To: main@jfw.groups.io
Subject: Re: pros and cons of Braille display

 

WARNING: This email originated externally. Exercise caution. Think before clicking links or opening attachments.

 

I find the opposite with the Orbit Reader 40.

It is a great display to use with Jaws. It has the 40 cells and cursor routing keys which help a lot when editing.

The support from Orbit Research has been excellent.

And, you cannot beat the feel of the braille on the Orbit display. Especially if you are not a really good braille reader, the more pronounced braille will be a great help.

There is an email list for the ORBIT displays. I have some information on them on my web site, along with the email subscription fo for the email group. Look foh the heading Orbit research information at www.turner42.com

HTH,

 

 

Richard 

"Great minds discuss ideas, average minds discuss events, small minds discuss people." -- Eleanor Roosevelt

 

 



On Apr 23, 2021, at 1:17 PM, Marianne Denning <marianne@...> wrote:

  There are lots of ways that a braille note taker can be helpful. I mean a braille Display. You can very quickly move your Kircher where you want it to go if you have curse around and keys. Remember, the orbit reader is meant to be a reader and not a braille display for a computer. I wouldn’t spend any money on the orbit reader because I have found it to be extremely poor quality and have not found getting help with it beneficial.



On Apr 23, 2021, at 2:03 PM, Van Lant, Robin via groups.io <Robin_Van_Lant@...> wrote:



I have a topic I’d like some input on. If I should take it elsewhere or talk to someone offline by phone, please advise a direction to go.   I am a JAWS user and really cannot function on a computer without speech, but still have a tiny pinhole of usable vision due to RP.  I use Braille for labeling things around the house, but am not a proficient reader, especially when beyond some two letter contractions.  Braille displays have always seemed too expensive, especially given that using one would feel more like an experiment now, given my poor efficiency. Yet, as my vision decreases, I’ve wondered if a Braille display (such as the Orbit) would be useful.  I’m not planning to use it to read books, but I’d like better understanding of why some of you use it.  I’ll be paying for it out of my own pocket, so this is a decision I don’t take lightly.  Does it add value to editing and formatting in Office 365 applications?  Does it give incrased accessibility to webpages or is that really the same accessibility that listening to JAWS gives?  What else should I consider in this decision? 

 

Thanks for any insights.

Robin

 




KeyCorp Public


This communication may contain privileged and/or confidential information. It is intended solely for the use of the addressee. No confidentiality or privilege is waived or lost as a result of any transmission errors. If you are not the intended recipient, you are strictly prohibited from disclosing, copying, distributing or using any of this information. If you have received this communication in error, please contact the sender immediately and destroy the material in its entirety, whether electronic or hard copy.

This communication is for informational purposes only, is not an offer, solicitation, recommendation or commitment for any transaction or to buy or sell any security or other financial product, and is not intended as investment advice or as a confirmation of any transaction. Any market price, indicative value, estimate, view, opinion, data or other information herein is not warranted as to completeness or accuracy, is subject to change without notice, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. accepts no liability for its use or to update or keep it current. Any views or opinions are those of the individual sender, not necessarily of KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc.

The sender of this communication is a licensed securities representative employed by or associated with KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. Member FINRA/SIPC and may also represent KeyBank National Association (“KeyBank N.A.”). Securities products and services are offered by KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. Banking products and services are offered by KeyBank N.A.

127 Public Square, Cleveland, OH 44114

If you prefer not to receive future e-mail offers for products or services from Key send an e-mail to DNERequests@... with 'No Promotional E-mails' in the SUBJECT line.

Join {main@jfw.groups.io to automatically receive all group messages.