[blind-philly-comp] Re: New Low Vision Planner

  • From: "Merv Keck" <blind5sparrow@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <blind-philly-comp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 4 Nov 2015 12:56:07 -0500

That is pretty snazzy. It reminds me when I had sight. I printed everything in
48 point bold including grocery lists. That was back before the iPhone. After I
began losing my sight I went out and bought one of those $250 little dictation
recorders that were digital and ran on batteries and always went dead half way
through the store, laughs! Now I use Word on the iPhone. And Voiceover. And
joke about being glad I don't need to worry about eye strain.
But I still miss all my fancy Star Trek and Star Wars and Christmas fonts I
blew up to 48 point bold and spent lots of money on ink printing.


-----Original Message-----
From: blind-philly-comp-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:blind-philly-comp-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of David Goldfield
Sent: Wednesday, November 4, 2015 11:40 AM
To: blind-philly-comp@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [blind-philly-comp] New Low Vision Planner


From the November 2015 Braille Monitor ..
Announcing a New Low Vision Weekly Planner:
If you are seeking a print calendar designed for people with low vision, you
should know about this new product. The EZ2 See Weekly Planner has just entered
the market. The 8-1/2-by-11-inch spiral bound product was brought to the market
by NFB-member Edward Cohen. You may have met him at convention when he was an
active member and lived in Indianapolis. He designed this calendar when he
could not find a weekly planner that met his late-stage RP vision needs. His
calendar is nothing like you’ve ever seen. The all black and white calendar
features a clean and open design with maximum spaces for each day’s schedule.
Calendar fonts range from forty to fifty-five point. The monthly pages include
large-print holidays with room for your own reminders.
Tired of writing off the edge of the page? Well it will be hard to do with the
EZ2 See calendar. Each weekly page has a dark border or as Edward calls them,
“pen bumpers.” Check it out at the NFB Independence
Market: <https://ecommerce.nfb.org/asp/default.asp>.

--
David Goldfield
Assistive Technology Specialist
www.DavidGoldfield.Info

You are invited to visit the moderator's Web site at WWW.DavidGoldfield.Info
for additional resources and information about assistive technology training
services.

To unsubscribe from this list, please email
blind-philly-comp-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word unsubscribe in the
subject line.

To subscribe from another email address, send email to
blind-philly-comp-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word subscribe in the subject
line.

To contact the list administrator, please email
blind-philly-comp-moderators@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

You are invited to visit the moderator's Web site at WWW.DavidGoldfield.Info
for additional resources and information about assistive technology training
services.

To unsubscribe from this list, please email
blind-philly-comp-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word unsubscribe in the
subject line.

To subscribe from another email address, send email to
blind-philly-comp-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the word subscribe in the subject
line.

To contact the list administrator, please email
blind-philly-comp-moderators@xxxxxxxxxxxxx

Other related posts: