Hi Ray and Jackie. I have read a lot of Braille material and it is nice to have a Braille book. for a start, if you are reading in bed and fall asleep it is unlikely to get dammaged when it falls off the bed. I have had a Braillenote that has worked well for 5 years and used this, away from the computer to read a lot of text files. All the harry potter books were read, the lord of the rings was read, a couple of james bond books and numerous issues of Which and Computer Shopper as well as a few Stephen King books and other things too. It gets used a lot for work as well for writing notes and reading work related info. It is used a hell of a lot really and I find it remarkably comfortable to use for reading. While reading Braille in a magazine is great, it generates one hell of a lot of weight for the recycler when it comes to throw out time where as with the Braillenote I get to both read in Braille and save space. I do wish more people could get access to a decent quality Braille note taker type device as listening to text being read by a speech synthesiser is not quite the same! Cheers Graham I haven't Graham Page Home Phone: 0207 265 9493 Mobile: 07753 607980 Fax: 0870 706 2773 Email: gpage@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx MSN: gabriel_mcbird@xxxxxxxxxxx Skype: gabriel_mcbird ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ray's Home" <rays-home@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, November 12, 2007 8:41 PM Subject: [access-uk] Re: Magazines The subject of the virtues of Braille and it's being a 'comfort zone' for some, is interesting. Don't know if there's much chance of it having a life on Vi-gen, but people's feelings around hard copy vs. refeshable is interesting. I have often felt that if a Braille notetaker or portable display was, as it were, to virtually fall into my lap, I wouldn't object. I only lived in such luxury for a year or two when I was working, since the Braillelite was swiped off me. Cheers, From Ray I can be contacted off-list at: mailto:ray-48@xxxxxxxx -----Original Message----- Jackie Cairns Ray, I prefer all the Scottish Braille Press magazines, mainly for their content as much as anything else. I get all four of them: the Sporting Record, Spectrum, Home Help and Madam. But then I get a lot of RNIB mags too, all in Braille, because I prefer reading shorter articles and browsing bits and pieces than getting into longer books these days. That's more to do with concentration through pain than anything else, because I used to read a lot more than I do now. But I agree there is so much more online now that some of what is printed, by the time it reaches your fingers, is outdated. And, for those who like Email and speech, TNAUK cover a wide variety of publications, but I don't subscribe to these as I like my Braille to be honest, and it takes me away from sitting at the computer all the time. And while I use my display, and would hate to be without it, there isn't a substitute for getting ripped into a Braille mag and flicking through it quickly. Jackie ----- Original Message ----- From: Ray's Home To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Sent: Monday, November 12, 2007 7:56 PM Subject: [access-uk] Re: Unsubbing And Access IT I'm the wrong person to ask about RNIB, or Scotish Braille Press publications for that matter. They seem on the pricey side to me, but do bear in mind much of the cost of any mag. is up-front, in actually producing the copy, though you'd have thought Brailling must cost a fair bit. I think particularly here on this sort of list, we must remember that likely most of us now are getting info through websites, email lists, digests, podcasts and the like. I simply wouldn't look to RNIB for technical matter now. I'm sure the same goes more and more for other areas of interest, like books, politics, music and so on. No end of magazines and newspapers you can subscribe to on-line. and many do. If only a way of bringing down the cost of ownership of Braille displays could be put in place, then those who prefer Braille over speech access could be satisfied by web-based distribution. Cheers, From Ray I can be contacted off-list at: mailto:ray-48@xxxxxxxx -----Original Message----- I stopped subscribing to it, because the export price became very expensive, and they took lots of articles from Access World, which is free. The other thing I can't understand is why RNIB charges me the same price for braille as for email, I could sort of understand that with braille it's the cost of paper and stuff, but nearly 30 pounds a year, and quite a thin magazine, I just stopped. I prefer Infotech magazine, because you can of course listen to a sort of review of the product. Are there any other good technology newsletters around? There used to be one called wyfiwyg, but it's also stopped. Ari __________ NOD32 2653 (20071112) Information __________ This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system. http://www.eset.com ** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe] ** If this link doesn't work then send a message to: ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ** and in the Subject line type ** unsubscribe ** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the ** immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq] ** or send a message, to ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq