[Blindtlk] A Couple of Questions About Braille Watches and a Little Humorous Irony

Brl2014! dotwriter1 at gmail.com
Sun Aug 9 22:33:27 UTC 2015


These days you can go online to find anything, including instructions on how to do many things. Perhaps the instructions for this watch our online as well. You never know what you can find on YouTube! I hate this because not everyone learns that way. I hate the fact that's how you need to learn how to use the Victor Stream reader.  I do not learn by demonstration and it doesn't matter whether its a blind person doing the video.

Ericka
Sent from my iPhone

> On Aug 8, 2015, at 10:43 PM, Szostak, Christine via blindtlk <blindtlk at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi All,
>  I just have a two quick questions regarding braille watches.
> 
>  I have used them from time-to-time and as many here know, I recently ordered one that both talks and uses braille.
> 
>  My first, and most important question is this: although I have typically been relatively accurate at telling time on the braille watch, I  nearly always seem to be off by 1-3 minutes (since there are no tick marks between the 12 main numbers okay, technically dots:)). What I was wondering about is whether anyone here who uses a braille watch has gotten really good at accuracy both in setting and reading the braille watch (i.e., accurate to the minute) or if I should just expect  myself to just assume that I am going to be nearly accurate but not perfec:) because of the lack of the tick marks? Hopefully that made some sense.
> 
>  I was using a vibrating watch, but switched to the braille watch simply because the vibrations require more time to tell time and I do not want to use speech on a watch when I am in professional settings such as when at work.
> 
> My second question is whether anyone knows why it is called a braille watch when it is actually not braille. Are there actually braille watches with real braille and not just 1-3 dots on them?
> 
> Ok, so now for my little bit of humorous irony. I received my new braille/talking watch and it came with printed (but not braille or audio) instructions. Does anyone else see the irony here. If you are going to make a watch for the blind, why would you only provide printed instructions? Ok,  so many of us, myself included, I am aware have programs like OpenBook and/or the KNFB Reader,:) but I am guessing that the printed instructions probably show images to assist the individual reading them which would not work with those programs.
> Happy weekend all!
> Chris
> 
> Dr. Christine M. Szostak
> Assistant Professor of Psychology
> Department of Social Sciences
> Shorter University
> Rome, Georgia
> szostak.1 at osu.edu<mailto:szostak.1 at osu.edu>
> cszostak at shorter.edu
> 
> _______________________________________________
> blindtlk mailing list
> blindtlk at nfbnet.org
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/blindtlk_nfbnet.org
> To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for blindtlk:
> http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/blindtlk_nfbnet.org/dotwriter1%40gmail.com




More information about the BlindTlk mailing list