[Electronics-Talk] Appliance accessibility
Gerald Levy
bwaylimited at verizon.net
Sun Feb 14 18:15:17 UTC 2016
I have an even better idea. Forget all this bluetooth and Internet
nonsense. Why not make appliances with tactile buttons and switches like in
the good old days? What a concept!! The problem is that the design and
manufacture of appliances has largely been taken over by the Chinese who are
more interested in making cheap products than in making them universally
accessible. And now that GE has agreed to sell its appliance business to
the Chinese electronics and appliance giant, Haier,appliance accessibility
is likely to get even worse.
Gerald
-----Original Message-----
From: cheez via Electronics-Talk
Sent: Sunday, February 14, 2016 12:06 PM
To: Discussion of accessible home electronics and appliances
Cc: cheez
Subject: Re: [Electronics-Talk] Appliance accessibility
Why not bypass bluetooth and make appliances accessible via the Internet.
If one can communicate with a fridge using a computer or smartphone, then
why not make it possible for one to set appliances the same way?
Now it may sound crazy, but if one doesn't have a computer or smartphone,
then they could use a landline like one can do to reset cable boxes and the
like.
Vince
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tracy Carcione via Electronics-Talk" <electronics-talk at nfbnet.org>
To: "'Discussion of accessible home electronics and appliances'"
<electronics-talk at nfbnet.org>
Cc: "Tracy Carcione" <carcione at access.net>
Sent: Sunday, February 14, 2016 8:35 AM
Subject: [Electronics-Talk] Appliance accessibility
> Many years ago now, the brilliant engineer Tim Cranmer had an idea of how
> to
> make appliances accessible. We would get a law passed requiring
> manufacturers to include a chip which would broadcast menu info to a blind
> person's device of choice. Those days, it was something like a Braille 'n
> Speak. These days, it would probably be a smart phone, with the signal
> via
> Bluetooth.
>
> Could some version of this idea be workable today? It wouldn't solve the
> problem of a touch screen control, as someone described for some
> dishwashers, but it would help with the problem of one button controlling
> different menus and submenus, like some washers I've seen.
>
> I'm not keen on my appliances being connected to the internet, but I'm
> also
> not happy with the struggle it can be these days to find something I can
> easily use.
>
> Tracy
>
>
>
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