[gui-talk] magazines on NLS BARD site

albert griffith albertgriffith at sbcglobal.net
Sun Aug 16 20:58:00 UTC 2009


Just copy the Kingsolver folder to your computer and load Smart Computing.
There have been few changes in notebooks over the last few years.  They've
just gotten smaller, lighter, more powerful, and cheaper. I can think of two
rather significant changes.  Some models are using solid state hard drives.
They have no moving parts so are the most durable.  There's also no boot up
time.  Wireless keyboards are becoming more popular too.   

-----Original Message-----
From: gui-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:gui-talk-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Joel Deutsch
Sent: Sunday, August 16, 2009 3:41 PM
To: GUI-Talk
Subject: [gui-talk] magazines on NLS BARD site

Albert,

I took your advice and looked on the BARD site for consumer Reports and 
Smart Computing. I'm downloading Smart Computing at this moment (which may 
take half a day, as my download speed has already dropped from 40-something 
into the 20s, and will probably keep dropping if prior experience is any 
guide). Good start, you may say.

But then I'm not a Stream user or whatever. All I've got is the NLS digital 
player, and I'm in the middle of listening to a novel (the Barbara 
Kingsolver one we were talking about) and of course that's on an otherwise 
BARD-free thumb drive plugged into the side of my player.

Now, if I feel like taking a listen to this magazine issue when it's finally

on my hard drive in three hours, I have no option but to somehow move the 
novel off my thumb drive and replace it with the magazine, or else the 
digital player will get confused. That's a firmware issue they're very vague

about an ETA for resolution.

And no, I don't have yet another available thumnb drive to donate to the 
cause. Well, maybe when I finish with the magazine, taking notes if I must 
as I go along and there are brand names or models of items I want to 
remember, I can just delete or transsfer its files (many of them, with this 
BARD thing) and copy the novel's files back onto the thumb drive, then use 
the navigation keys to come as close as possible to where I left off 
reading.

what a drag.

But does this sound logical? I really want to do a little bit of reading 
about current computers from a general rather than blind point of view, and 
only then check around to see how Jaws-friendly this or that product might 
be. But first I need to understaend what's been happening lately with 
notebooks in a more general sense, as I know they've gone through some 
changes, mostly for the better, although I'm sure there are negatives to be 
aware of.
What fun.


_______________________________________________
gui-talk mailing list
gui-talk at nfbnet.org
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gui-talk_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for
gui-talk:
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/options/gui-talk_nfbnet.org/albertgriffith%40s
bcglobal.net





More information about the GUI-Talk mailing list