[Electronics-talk] microwaves
Ashley Bramlett
bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Mon Jan 6 06:31:52 UTC 2014
Sandy,
You did the same thing as me. I labeled the microwave In braille with dimo
tape.
My rehab teacher helped me come up with short forms for the labels. We
labeled the essential things; some of the advanced functions were not
labeled.
This method seems to work alright. But if there was something more usable
such as an appliance with buttons, I'd get that.
I think it would be cool if they made a microwave which was voice
activated.
Ashley
-----Original Message-----
From: Sandy
Sent: Monday, January 06, 2014 1:23 AM
To: Discussion of accessible electronics and appliances
Subject: Re: [Electronics-talk] microwaves
Ashley,
I used to have a microwave I labeled with Braille on Dymo tape. There were
some things I didn't label, but I did do d e f for defrost and b e v for
beverage. I used c l r for clear. My friend, who taught rehab to blind,
gave me the idea of using two full cells of Braille for clear, which I did
on a later micro. I labeled all the numbers, though the same rehab friend
said she labeled the numbers on the left and right ends of each row. Now I
have one of the overly priced talking microwaves, which that friend gave me
one year for combination Christmas/birthday present. My other old one does
not work well. The inside of this one is chipping off in places on its
sides and underneath the turntable. It is Hamilton Beach, which I hear is
not made with speech anymore (this is about 3 years old).
Sandy
--------------------------------------------------
From: "Ashley Bramlett" <bookwormahb at earthlink.net>
Sent: Sunday, January 05, 2014 11:56 PM
To: "Discussion of accessible electronics and appliances"
<electronics-talk at nfbnet.org>
Subject: [Electronics-talk] microwaves
> Hi all,
>
> How do you make your microwave accessible? Do they make ones with dials
> where you click them into place as they used to?
> These strike me as more accessible as there is less things to press.
> I don’t think they make microwaves with buttons anymore, right?
> I had one like that in our old house, twenty years ago.
> It felt like a telephone keypad and was easy to use.
>
> All new appliances seem to have flat screens.
> If not, all are those touch pads, which mean we have to label them.
>
>
> If you label it, do you use braille? I’ve noticed there’s so many buttons.
> I’ve just labeled the essential items. I was able to label with two
> letters per button which is a good thing as one letter would not work
> because it could mean several things. So, I wrote cl for clear and ck for
> cook time.
> I heard there was one talking microwave, but I would not get it, as its
> overpriced. I figure I can adapt an off the shelf product.
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