[real-eyes] Fw: [AccessComp] Fw: A review of the VR Stream by Deborah Kendrick

  • From: "Reginald George" <sgeorge@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <real-eyes@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 24 Jan 2008 08:47:03 -0600

This review of the Stream from this months Access World magazine is so good 
that it deserves to be shared.  The only negative comment she makes is about 
the volume of the speaker and it will get louder in the next update I'm 
hearing.  Also support for the Windows Media format and braille files is 
coming soon.


Full Stream Ahead: A Review of the Victor Reader Stream
Deborah Kendrick

Few new products in the assistive technology arena have drawn as much 
enthusiasm as the debut of the Victor Reader Stream from HumanWare Canada in 
July 2007. Largely responsible for its instant popularity was the 
accompanying announcement that the National Library Service for the Blind 
and Physically Handicapped (NLS) will launch a web site that will be 
accessible to any eligible patron for downloading Digital Talking Books. The 
prospect of being able to play the familiar and loved NLS Talking Books on a 
handheld player--with the convenience of digital markup in the 
bargain--prompted many customers who are blind or have low vision to grab 
their credit cards and order, in many cases without having examined the 
product in advance.

Shipment of the Victor Reader Stream began in early September, and the 
enthusiasm is still spreading. In November, more features were added, and 
there is a promise of more to come. What sets the Stream apart, in large 
measure, is the multiplicity of tasks it can perform. On this single device, 
you can store and listen to Talking Books from NLS, DAISY books from 
Bookshare, your music collection, and any text file from your computer. The 
Stream doubles as a handy voice recorder for personal notes, meetings, or 
lectures, and, as of November 15, is equipped to play books and programs 
from Audible.com. Perhaps most surprising is that it sells for $329 plus 
shipping, an unusually affordable price in the assistive technology market.

The Stream is a handheld device (similar in size to a deck of cards and 
weighing about 6 ounces) that has been designed with users who are blind or 
have low vision in mind. Its controls are all tactile and easy to operate, 
with the only visual indicator being a small LED (light-emitting diode) that 
enables the user with low vision to know when the unit is off, on, or 
charging. There are, of course, audio indicators for all the operations as 
well.

As I mentioned earlier, the Stream fits in the palm of your hand. The front 
contains a 12-button telephone-style keypad. The 5 key has the familiar nib 
for quick orientation. Above the 1 key is a square button, the Go To page or 
Heading key, and above the 3 key a diamond-shaped button, which is the 
Bookmark key. At the top are the small speaker grill and internal 
microphone. Below the keypad is a raised-line separator, below which are 
four more buttons. The bottom three are the Play/Stop button, flanked by the 
Rewind and Forward keys. The fourth key, centered above them, is a sleep 
timer. On the left edge of the unit are the round Power button and two 
arrow-shaped buttons that are used to control volume, speed, and tone. On 
the right edge are headphone and external microphone jacks and the Record 
button. Across the top is the small USB port; the AC adapter jack; and, in 
the center, the slot for the SD (secure digital) card, which stores all 
contents played on the Stream.

All content to be played on the Stream must be stored on an SD card. 
Although a USB cable is included in the package, it is recommended that you 
transfer data directly from your computer to the SD card using a card reader 
(a small device about the size of a thumb drive, with a USB connector for 
plugging into your computer at one end and a slot for the SD card at the 
other). Whether you transfer material to the card directly or to the Stream 
itself, the process could not be simpler. Material is simply copied from one 
place to the other using Windows Explorer; no special software is required. 
However, NLS books must be unzipped, and each book has about 20 files.

Victor Reader Stream has its own folder structure that must be maintained 
for materials to play properly. Each SD card that is used has a folder 
called Talking Books (which is for NLS books and other DAISY content), a 
folder for music, a folder for text files, and a folder called Other Books. 
On November 15, HumanWare released an update that includes the capability of 
playing materials that are downloaded from Audible.com.

Although a folder called Audible must be created using the Audible Manager 
software, the Audible books are actually placed in the Other Books folder. 
This may sound confusing, but all of the setup and transferring of content 
is so intuitively designed that it remained confusing only for a minute or 
two.

Everything in the Stream is voice guided. For permanent messages--power on, 
power off, the names of folders, the number of books on a bookshelf, the 
functions of navigation keys, and so on--the voice heard is male, the 
"Victor voice," which will be familiar to any customer who has owned 
previous products in the Victor Reader line. The built-in text-to-speech 
synthesizer is "Vocalizer," a female voice that is clear and easy on the 
ear.

Each of the Stream's folders is called a bookshelf. When you press the 1 key 
on the keypad, the Stream cycles through these bookshelves--Talking Books, 
Music, Text Files, Other Books, and Notes. The Victor voice (the male 
recorded voice) announces the name of the bookshelf and the number of books 
it contains. To go through the list of books on a given shelf, you use the 4 
and 6 keys to move backward and forward through the list. This list of books 
is spoken by the female voice of Vocalizer. For DAISY books, the book title 
on the bookshelf is announced in the book narrator's voice.

What really makes the Victor Reader Stream shine is the range of navigation 
possibilities that it offers. All navigation is done using the 2, 4, 6, and 
8 keys on the keypad and is highly intuitive and easy to learn. In a Digital 
Talking Book or magazine from NLS, for example, you may be able to move 
forward and back by chapter, section, or other heading. Victor's time-jump 
feature allows you to move back or forward by 1-, 5-, or 10-minute 
intervals. With the bookmark feature, you can set bookmarks to highlight 
particular spots to return to, or you can place a highlight bookmark to 
bookmark a specific passage or quote.

When you read a file from the text files folder, a different set of 
navigational elements are offered. Here, you can navigate by screen, line, 
sentence, character, or word. In a file with DAISY markup--such as a book 
from Bookshare or a newspaper from NFB Newsline--you have the best of both 
worlds with the ability to move by line, sentence, character, or word, but 
also navigational levels 1, 2, and 3, which make it possible to move by 
section, chapter, or article.

Within the music bookshelf, there is a different style of navigation. You 
can navigate by folder or file. You can set the menu to random selection 
(shuffle) mode, and you can use the Go To key to go to a specific song, 
rather than a page. (This works only if you remember the number of the file 
where that particular song is stored.)

Nice Touches
a.. You can jump from textbook to newspaper to music to your favorite 
fantasy, and the Stream will remember where you left off and resume playing 
from that point when you return.
b.. Variable speed is available in all books, including those from 
Audible.com. In the music folder, however, where altered speed is not 
desirable, the speed is automatically set to 0 (normal). Then, when you 
return to a book or file in one of the other areas, the speed setting that 
you chose there is resumed.
c.. Bookmarking capabilities are available in all areas, including the music 
folders.
d.. When moving through the music folder--as is the case anywhere else in 
the Stream--Vocalizer announces the file number and name of the track.
e.. You can delete a note or book or other file with the press of a button.
f.. The lithium battery (which is user replaceable) takes 4 hours to charge 
fully and lasts for 12-15 hours.
g.. By pressing the Info key, 0, you can find out at any time how much 
battery power is remaining, how much of the file you have heard and how much 
remains, the number of headings and bookmarks in the current book, and a few 
other things.
What the Stream Does Not Do
Well, the Stream will not make coffee, of course, and it does not vacuum. 
But here are a few other features or lack thereof worth noting:

a.. It plays MP3 files, but does not play WMA files. In other words, you 
cannot play music stored in Windows Media Player files or recorded books 
downloaded from Unabridged.com or NetLibrary.
b.. The Stream does not have a clock or alarm feature. (It does, however, 
have a sleep timer, which allows you to set the unit to shut off in 15, 30, 
45, or 60 minutes).
c.. The built-in speaker is not good for listening to more than status 
information while charging or transferring content. At its maximum volume, 
it can be heard only in a quiet room and in close proximity to the ear. 
Existing cell phone technology offers speaker designs that are both compact 
and have a clear and listenable signal. The Stream should do the same. For 
times when headphones are not the desired listening mode, however, small 
external speakers work well.
d.. It should also be pointed out that although the 5 key does have a small, 
raised dot for orientation, it is much too faint to be useful to most 
customers.
Coming Soon
At this writing, HumanWare is waiting for Recording for the Blind and 
Dyslexic (RFB&D) to release its user authorization key for unlocking RFB&D 
files. When it does, which RFB&D promised would be in mid-December, but has 
not happened at the time of this writing, the Stream will also be able to 
play the vast library of textbooks that RFB&D offers in its AudioPlus 
format. (These books include DAISY markup, including a level for page 
numbers.) Also expected to be released in December is HumanWare's Stream 
Companion software, which will provide a simple interface for moving Talking 
Books from PC to Stream, and a provision for converting 3 GP audio notes 
files to .wav files. HumanWare was also on the brink of releasing an 
additional voice for the Vocalizer synthesizer. The current female voice is 
called Samantha; the new voice is called Tom. Each is integrated into its 
own software version, so users will have the choice of putting one or the 
other in the Victor Stream, not both at the same time. Listen to the samples 
of the Samantha and Tom voices, as well as the Victor voice attached to this 
article.

The Bottom Line
All too often, people who are blind or have low vision have raced to catch 
up and have tools that are at least on par with those of sighted people. 
Once in a while, assistive technology actually puts them in an advantageous 
position. Victor Reader Stream may well be one of these exceptions. Pulling 
my own unit out on a bus or train, I can listen to any one of a dozen novels 
or collections of poetry, three newspapers with today's date on them, my own 
favorite music collection, a television episode (recorded and converted to 
an MP3 file), any one of a variety of favorite radio broadcasts, one of the 
dozens of documents and web pages I need or want to review, and more. Sure, 
there is room for improvement. But the Victor Reader Stream offers an 
abundance of features in a tiny, powerful package and is one product that 
warrants a sustaining of that original excitement.

Manufacturer's Comments
HumanWare
"Incorporating so many advanced features into a portable and inexpensive 
package was a challenging an exciting project for HumanWare. We appreciate 
the enthusiastic response of the marketplace, and we continue to work on new 
features and improvements. Playback of both WMA recorded audio and BRF 
braille text formats are in development and are expected soon. To keep up to 
date on Stream developments, we invite you to subscribe to the Stream email 
announcements list. Visit <www.humanware.ca/USA/stream.html> and select the 
register to Stream News Wire link."

Product Information
Product: Victor Reader Stream.

Manufacturer: HumanWare Canada: 445, rue du Parc Industriel, Longueuil, 
Quebec J4H 3V7, Canada; phone: 888-723-7273 or 819-471-4818; e-mail: 
<ca.info@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; web site: <www.humanware.ca>.

Price: $329.

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  • » [real-eyes] Fw: [AccessComp] Fw: A review of the VR Stream by Deborah Kendrick