[nabs-l] The technology in specialized notetakers
Carly Mihalakis
carlymih at comcast.net
Sat Jul 13 15:37:11 UTC 2013
Good morning, Anjelina,
Relative to your doings mine are pretty lo-tech with a layer
of 10-year-old brain damage being tactil appraxia which, in an event
I didn't enumerate this adnausium is an inability of hand to
accurately communicate with brain thus rendering reading braille
which was once my lover, tantamount to a pipe dream. Thus, I tend
toward the Victor Stream, not wanting to keep track of other divices.
Living with brain damage has definitely made my experience much more
scaled-down, sometimes even narrow. So, let's here it for the Victor!
for today, Car At 07:10 AM 7/13/2013, Anjelina Cruz wrote:
>HI all,
>I used to heavily rely on my Braille Note but have found for me using
>my computer during classes has been more productive. Is there a reason
>why the technology in blindness devices seems to lag behind mainstream
>technology? For instance, reading docx files has just come to the Apex
>this summer.
>I'm not at all unappreciative of the tools I have at my disposal,
>however I wonder why there isn't more of a push within the blindness
>community to modernize some of our tech choices faster.
>
>What devices have you found help you be a productive student?
>--
>Anjelina
>
>_______________________________________________
>nabs-l mailing list
>nabs-l at nfbnet.org
>http://nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/nabs-l_nfbnet.org
>To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info for nabs-l:
>http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nabs-l_nfbnet.org/carlymih%40comcast.net
More information about the NABS-L
mailing list