[Nfbmo] Looking for Info About Basic Cell Phones LG LX370

DanFlasar at aol.com DanFlasar at aol.com
Mon Mar 18 21:08:26 UTC 2013


Shelia,
   Remember that most Sprint plans offer unlimited calling from 9  pm 
through 8 am Friday through MNonday norninbg, and outside of the hours 8 am  to 9 
pm weekedays.  In addition, if you call another cell phone, the minu  tes 
are unlimnited.
Dan
 
 
In a message dated 3/18/2013 2:36:27 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
sbwright95 at att.net writes:

Sprint had  three basic phones last week. I ended up choosing a Samsung 
M4000
as I  indicated in a previous posts. It has spoken menus for all functions 
of
the  telephone and settings for the phone. It does not seem to work with
speech  for the internet. Texting works but the verdict is out on whether  
all
incoming text messages would talk. There are also accessible menu  whereby
font size, contrasts, reading speed, can be altered. The learning  curve for
me has been very minimal. The buttons are one of the best I've  seen for
tactile use. 

The talk time is not as good as I had hoped.  It is a max of 4 hours or 240
minutes. It is blue tooth ready, has hearing  accessibility settings. I paid
$50 for the phone and am eligible for a  rebate on that so there are some
pluses.

I would recommend it even  after a week of using it to anyone that needs or
wants a basic  phone.

Shelia


-----Original Message-----
From: Nfbmo  [mailto:nfbmo-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of 
DanFlasar at aol.com
Sent:  Monday, March 18, 2013 12:09 AM
To: nfbmo at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re:  [Nfbmo] Looking for Info About Basic Cell Phones LG  LX370

Fred,
Actually, Sprint offered - may still offer - a  phone that did  provide 
some text-to-speech, but it is very  limited.  It wouldn't go  more than a 
level or two down  (example, it could voice navigate you to open  settings 
to

read  some tips on using the phone.  But going down another  level you  
lost 
speech.)  The buttons were tiny, also.  As far as I   recall, it was not a
touch 
screen, you used a navigator (circular)  button to  move between the icons, 
and pressed a button inside the  ring to select the  button. Susan Ford, I 
believe, found a  non-smart  phone that worked for  her.

If anyone  is interested, this was the LG LX370 offered via  Sprint.   I  
also recall that there were phones, such as a Nokia model,  that came  with 
an OS called RockBox that plus a text-to-speech program that   offered some 
reasonable functionality - but it wasn't cheap.  I think  the  pioneering
KNFB 
Reader knocked that system off the  market.
Dan


In a message dated 3/17/2013  11:39:59 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
goodfolks at charter.net  writes:

Dan, there  are very few if any phones available with  speech other than 
the 
Iphone and  some of the Android offerings. You  might check with AT&T or 
Verizon,  but I'm thinking that because  we are again such a small market 
that 
there  is very little  effort to grow this type of phone market. There is, 
however  Public  Law 255 which was passed by Congress in the 90's which was 
supposed   to insure that all phones be made accessible, it never did 
happen, 
and  to  this day, it is not the phone carriers which have come forward, 
but  
either  phone manufacturer or third party initiatives which have made  some 
 
in-roads in to this market.

Fred


-----  Original Message  ----- 
From: <DanFlasar at aol.com>
To:   <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2013 11:27  PM
Subject:  Re: [Nfbmo] Looking for Info About Basic Cell  Phones


> Yep - a  friend has one of those.  But there  a re other people who have
>  problems reading any text because of  macular degeneration.  I've gotten 
 
> them
> on to  Talking Books (albeit in other states) - phones w/   text-to-speech
> would be much appreciated.  And there is the   vanity factor - they don't 
> want to
> be seen in public with  one  of those clunky jitterbugs.
>       Dan
>
>
>
> In a message dated 3/17/2013 11:17:23  P.M.  Central Daylight Time,
> goodfolks at charter.net  writes:
>
>  Dan there is  a phone, the Jitterbug with  buttons which are a bit  
larger.
> It
> can be had   from http://www.greatcall.com or  from Independent Living 
Aids
>  which  website is  http://www.independentliving.com
>
>  Fred olver
>
>  -----  Original Message ----- 
>  From:  <DanFlasar at aol.com>
> To:   <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
>  Sent: Sunday, March 17, 2013 10:28  PM
> Subject:  Re: [Nfbmo]  Looking for Info About Basic Cell  Phones
>
>
>>   Gary,
>>     I understand your point - I put off buying  an  iPhonbe  for a  long,
> long
>> time.  But  after 3 different   phones that seemed to offer  some  speech
>> assistance and  each one  being lacking, or getting to  be more and   
more
>>  expensive,
>> the iPhone  didn't look  that bad.
>>    But  hopefully, technology  has  advanced in the area of  'regular'
> phones
>> as   well?  I sure would like to know of what's out  there   that  
actually 
>> is
>> accessible and doesn't  cost   excessively.   I have  friends who  have
>  severe
>> visual  impairment and/or arthritis  that makes trying  to  press tiny
>>  buttons  to
>> be a major  problem.  Actually, I had the same   problem  with small  
button
>> phones myself - another  reason that  the larger icons  of the  iPHone
>  helped
>> me
>> a great    deal.
>>   But, what's out there in terms of   non-smart  phones?
>>   Dan
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> In a  message  dated  3/17/2013 8:54:21 P.M. Central Daylight  Time,
>>  gwunder at earthlink.net   writes:
>>
>> Hello,   Fred.  I have no wish  to be  argumentative, but I have to tell 
 
>>  you
>> that  there are a lot of  older blind  people,  not to suggest that 
Shelia
>> Wright is  one of    them, who simply want to telephone to be a 
telephone.
>>   They
>>  are  not interested in going to a menu that  says  they want to use the
>> phone
>> as a  phone  rather  than a web browser, an email  client, or a  music
>  player.
>> The  advance that Apple has given  to  blind  people in working out a
>> strategy
>>  for  us to  use  touchscreen technology is fantastic and I love  it, 
but I
>>  realize   that I am a power user who  very much likes all of the  extra
>>  features
>>  that  the iPhone provides.  It is the best radio I've  ever  had, but 
it 
is
>>  not
>> the  best cell phone  I've ever   had.
>>
>> One of the items that will  be on our   convention  agenda has to do with
>>  smart
>> phones  and all they can give  to  blind  people, but in our board  
meeting
>> there
>> was  an  equal chorus for  having  something on the agenda for  people 
who
>>   simply
>> want a telephone to be  a  telephone.  I think we  dare  not forget  
about
>> this
>> segment of the    population.   Not every blind person can afford in  
>>  iPhone;
>> not
>> every   blind  person can learn  to use one; not every blind person once 
>>  the
>>   hassle  involved in using touchscreen  technology when we can still   
find
>> telephones   with buttons.
>>
>>    Warmly,
>>
>> Gary
>>
>>
>>   -----Original   Message-----
>> From: Nfbmo   [mailto:nfbmo-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf  Of  Fred   
Olver
>> Sent: Wednesday, March 13, 2013 5:55  PM
>>   To: NFB of Missouri  Mailing List
>>  Subject: Re: [Nfbmo]  Looking  for Info About Basic Cell   Phones
>>
>>  At this time, I can't  imagine  anyone wanting "just a basic cell   
phone"
>>  when
>>  the Iphone has so much to   offer.
>>
>> With it you can read   books,  send  and receive email, order dinner, use
> it
>>  as
>> a  GPS  alternative  while traveling by car, bus  or on foot. You can  
surf
>> the
>> internet,  access  NFB newsline, get  local weather  forecasts, listen  
to
>> your
>> favorite  radio  stations etc.   To settle for something less capable is 
 
a
>> mistake  because the   21st century's need is for  instant communication 
 
on
>> all
>> sorts  of  levels.  The  android sector of phones are severely limited  
in
>>   terms
>> of offering  accessible software  from the  phones'  manufacturer as 
well 
>> as
>> other   sources  of possible downloads in  the google play store.   Also,
>> because
>> of the   configuration of  the  Android phones there appears to be much
>  more
>>   of
>> a  possibility of viruses  being able to get in to  your   phone.
>>
>>
>> -----  Original  Message  -----
>>  From: "Shelia Wright"    <sbwright95 at att.net>
>> To: "'NFB of  Missouri  Mailing  List'"  <nfbmo at nfbnet.org>
>> Sent:   Wednesday, March  13, 2013 5:44  PM
>> Subject: [Nfbmo]  Looking for  Info  About Basic Cell   Phones
>>
>>
>>>    Hello,
>>>
>>> I just got a Sam Sung M400  out   of  necessity. My initial impression 
is
>>  very
>>>  positive. The  voice menus  are very  similar to my antique LG-550 -  
>>>  Fusic
>>>  with
>>> even  added  voice  menus thus expanding the  accessibility. However,  
>>>  there
>>> still  seems to be some   features not  accessible yet. I do love the
>>   quality
>>>   of
>>> sound and almost  no  learning    curve.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>   I  would like to  be able to text but the sales rep at the  Sprint  
store
>> said
>>>  he was 99% sure  that it would not  read the incoming text    messages.
>>> Therefore, I left  text messaging blocked on my  phone  as  there is 
still
>  a
>>>  additional fee for basic phone plans;  However,  when   experimenting 
with
>> the
>>> phone, I    received a text from Sprint about  usage of minutes. The  
>>>  phone
>>> read
>>> this message  aloud. So does   anyone  know if it will read incoming  
text
>>> messages from  other     sources.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>  Also,  if you've used  this phone is  there any drawbacks.  There is  a
> short
>>> window  of time in which I  could   return it if not   satisfied.
>>>
>>>   Thanks,
>>>
>>>     Shelia
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>   _______________________________________________
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for
>>>  Nfbmo:
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>>
>   
http://nfbnet.org/mailman/options/nfbmo_nfbnet.org/goodfolks%40charter.net
>>>
>>>
>>>   -----
>>> No virus found in this message.
>>>  Checked  by AVG  -  www.avg.com
>>> Version:  2013.0.2904 / Virus  Database:  2641/6169 - Release   Date:
>>>    03/13/13
>>>
>>
>>
>>    _______________________________________________
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>>
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>>
>>    -----
>> No virus found in this message.
>> Checked by  AVG  -  www.avg.com
>> Version: 2013.0.2904 / Virus  Database:  2641/6184 - Release  Date: 
>>   03/17/13
>>
>
>
>   _______________________________________________
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>
>   -----
> No virus found in this message.
> Checked by AVG -   www.avg.com
> Version: 2013.0.2904 / Virus Database: 2641/6184 -  Release  Date: 
03/17/13
>   


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