[Diabetes-talk] iBGStar
Gregory D. Rosenberg
gregg at ricis.com
Thu Jan 23 17:54:18 UTC 2014
Good morning everyone,
I bought an iBGStar shortly after it came to market. It works OK and is fairly accessible. They have some room for improvement. I have big hands and their strips are smaller than most. So when I drop on on the kitchen table it is a bit harder to pick up. As a software developer I have higher expectations than many other users since I know in my mind how would would have coded their app. It is a little better than good. I have sent them feedback, but have not received any reply to my emails showing interest on their part.
On Jan 22, 2014, at 22:24 CST, Mike Freeman <k7uij at panix.com> wrote:
> An update:
>
>
>
> I hadn't looked at the iBGStar app from Sanofi-Aventis since early this
> fall. An update was released in December, 2013, which resolved a bunch of
> problems such that the app would work with iOS versions from 3 on and
> iPhones from the 3GS to the iPhone 5C and 5S. Although I haven't read clear
> through the documentation yet and won't get a chance to do so until after
> Washington Seminar, it appears that this version of the app, though awkward
> (one must double-tap buttons labeled with numbers to enter values), is
> accessible using VoiceOver. This is a vast improvement on the version of the
> app Veronica Elsea and I tested early this past fall. So when I get back
> from DC, I may purchase the meter and some test strips and give the app a
> go.
>
>
>
> One can enter bg readings, insulin and carbs into the app's database using
> these number buttons, as I say, though exactly how it all fits together
> won't be clear to me until I read through the documentation.
>
>
>
> Some cautions: it is not clear to me that a blind person can set up the
> meter that talks to the iBGStar app independently, i.e., set its date/time,
> pair up the Bluetooth connection with the iPhone, etc. I do not immediately
> see a way to do any of this from the iPhone app and this makes sense; the
> app only works with the meter once the iPhone is paired with it.
>
>
>
> This isn't exactly an accessible insulin pump but it has some possibilities
> for Alan although, as I say, I'd bet the meter itself could not be set up by
> a blind person which would negate the usefulness of the system unless one
> wished to use the iBGStar app only to record one's log.
>
>
>
> Mike Freeman
>
>
>
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--
73' & 75'
Gregory D. Rosenberg AB9MZ
gregg at ricis.com
RICIS, Inc.
7849 Bristol Park Drive
Tinley Park, IL 60477-4594
http://www.ricis.com
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