[accesscomp] FW: three days of Dan's tips are attached

  • From: "Robert Acosta" <boacosta@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "tektalk discussion" <tektalkdiscussion@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 8 Apr 2014 10:20:04 -0700

 

 

Robert Acosta, President

Helping Hands for the Blind

(818) 998-0044

www.helpinghands4theblind.org

 

From: dan Thompson [mailto:dthompson5@xxxxxxxxx] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 08, 2014 8:37 AM
To: dan Thompson
Subject: three days of Dan's tips are attached

 

Hi All, There were a few email address thave been changed and were
preventing the distribution list to send out.  I have found the problem and
apologize for all the test emails.  So I am sending two attachments
consisting of Friday and Monday's tip that did not get sent out.  Today's
tip  is below.  Thanks for your patience.

 

about Google voice

After May 15 this year Google voice will disable XMPP access to it services.
This will affect 

many third-party apps which use it, but not all of them. Currently the best
app that I know of to work 

with Google voice is called GV connect. They do have their own app for the
service, but I do think it is 

flaky at best. The biggest change for Google voice users is for those that
use apps like talk atone or the 

OB talk phone bridge boxes to have free home phone service without paying
for it. However there is a 

solution for those types of users that cost $35 per year for unlimited
incoming calls and 300 minutes 

about going calls.  There is also another one which is costing $60 a year
which includes unlimited 

incoming and outgoing calls. They will even set up your Google voice number
as the outgoing caller ID so 

if a lot of people have that number they won't have to worry about learning
a new number for you. As 

for using the Google voice number for things like text messaging and other
things, Google voice will 

migrated into their hangouts platform which is currently not very voice over
friendly. I do not know if 

This will still continue to work correctly on the website. 

 

This email has been scanned  by norton 360 and is free of viruses

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A Daily Quote for Lent: Aided by Christ's grace, by Augustine of Hippo,
430-543 A.D. 

"God the Father said: 'I sent you One who would seek you out, walk with you,
and forgive you. So he had feet to walk with and hands to forgive with.
Thus, when he ascended after his resurrection, he showed hands, side, and
feet: hands with which he gave pardon to sinners; and side from which flowed
the ransom of the redeemed.'" (excerpt from Sermon 16A,10) 

  _____  

 

Attachment: friday april 3rd 2014, Useful Daily Tips.docx
Description: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document

Ten Useful Tips for Braille Users of iDevices
ACB Braille Forum for April 2014
by Scott Davert

**   Introduction

This post was partially inspired by articles which give general advice about 
seemingly less-known features of an iDevice. You will also find blog entries on 
other tech topics scattered throughout the Internet which have similar tips for 
pretty much any mainstream type of technology. To add to this body of 
literature, 

I have compiled 10 useful tips for braille users of the iPod, iPhone, and iPad 
below. This article was written with the intent to provide both those who are 
new, and those who are more advanced braille users, with some new and helpful 
tidbits of information. These tips come from my knowledge as a braille user of 
iDevices, as well as from my work in the field with other individuals who are 
deaf-blind who also use braille with their iDevices.


**1.   Improving the connection process

If Bluetooth is enabled, each time you press the Home key on your iDevice, it 
will search for other Bluetooth devices which it can connect to. This includes 
braille displays that have already been paired. So to have a greater chance of 
getting your iDevice and braille display to start communicating immediately, it 
is a good idea to have your braille display on and in discoverable or terminal 
for screen reader mode before unlocking your iDevice. As long as the 2 have 
been 
previously paired, and that braille display is the chosen one in VoiceOver, the 
pairing process should commence very quickly. It is true that you can sometimes 
get the braille display to connect while turning it on with your iDevice 
already unlocked, but this will not always be successful.

**2.   What's with the funky symbols in iOS 7?
If you are a braille user living in the U.S., Canada, UK, or any other country 
which has not officially adopted Unified English Braille 
<http://www.iceb.org/ueb.html>  yet, you may be wondering what the deal is with 
some of the braille translation. The issue is that iOS 7 automatically uses the 
Unified English Braille table, no matter how your regional and language 
settings are configured. This includes if you had previously configured a 
different translation table in English prior to upgrading to iOS 7. If you wish 
to switch 
back to U.S. or UK braille, go in to Settings, General, Accessibility, 
VoiceOver, Braille, and then select Translation table. Select 1 of the 3 
choices, and your braille will switch to that translation table.

**3.   Noisy VoiceOver, quiet display
In iOS 7, you can turn off VoiceOver sounds without impacting system sounds. 
This is useful if you wish to receive sound alerts about notifications, but 
find the clicks and beeps of VoiceOver to be annoying. There are two ways of 
doing this. 
You can either add it in to your rotor settings with VoiceOver or go to 
Settings, General, Accessibility, VoiceOver, and then turn the "sounds" off.

**4.   What was that again?

Sometimes, VoiceOver gives you a result or displays information which flashes 
up in braille and then disappears. One example of this is with the Looktel 
Money Reader app, 
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/looktel-money-reader/id417476558?mt=8>  
another when getting a result with TapTapSee, 
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/taptapsee-blind-visually-
impaired/id567635020?mt=8>  and a 3rd in certain hints with Dice World. 
<https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/dice-world-farkle-yatzy-
balut/id553269986?mt=8>  Fortunately, starting with iOS 6, you can read it 
again if you didn't catch it the first time. To do so, press space with N and 
you can then review a history of the last few things VoiceOver sent to the 
braille display at your own pace. To go to the previous item, press space with 
dot 1, and press space with dot 4 to advance through the history. When you're 
done reviewing these messages, press space with N again to return to wherever 
you were in iOS. 
Note that while you are reviewing these messages, pressing space with dot 1 or 
dot 4 will still move the VoiceOver cursor, so once you press space with N the 
second time, you may be returned to a different point on the screen.


**5.   Dude, where's my battery life?
Anyone who uses external hardware that connects through Bluetooth, whether it's 
an external GPS receiver, headset, keyboard, or braille display, can attest to 
the fact that it is quite the battery hog. While logic may dictate that using 
the screen curtain will help save battery, since it makes the screen go dark, 
this is not true. The screen curtain is, quite literally, a curtain that goes 
over your 
screen and is a VoiceOver-specific function. You can verify this by turning 
your screen brightness up to 100 percent while the screen curtain is enabled 
and watching your battery do a downward spiral. You can also feel heat around 
the edges of the screen after using your device with the brightness set this 
high 
after several minutes. Instead, you may have guessed it, set your screen 
brightness to 0 percent. Just remember to bring the screen brightness back up 
some when you wish for a sighted user to see your screen clearly. You can do 
this by going in to the control center in iOS 7. With earlier versions of iOS, 
you can also adjust the screen brightness by going into settings, brightness 
and 
wallpaper, and then making the adjustment this way. For even more practical 
ways to conserve battery power, please see David Goodwin's article called Tips 
For Improving Battery Life in iOS 7 <http://www.applevis.com/guides/ios/tips-
improving-battery-life-ios-7> at www.applevis.com/guides/ios/tips-improving-
battery-life-ios-7.


**6.   Hey, what's this button do?
While most modern-day braille displays have a Perkins-style keyboard and cursor 
router buttons, they also have some buttons which make them unique. They are 
configured to help make your life easier in various ways. For example, they may 
scroll in a certain direction and be located in such a way that you can operate 
them while not having to take your hands off of the display. While the manual 
and the various commands listed on apple.com are great, it's not always 
convenient to 
pull up such a list. Fortunately, iOS has you covered. From anywhere in iOS, 
press space with K to activate VoiceOver help. This will allow you to not only 
press buttons and keyboard combinations to find out what they do, but will also 
let you practice gestures and keyboard commands that you may use if you have a 
bluetooth keyboard. These are messages that flash up, so press space with N if 
you miss them the first time. To exit keyboard help, press space with B to 
activate the back button. You will be returned to where you were before 
entering this mode. Note that when there is no message flashing up, the braille 
display will still show the last thing that was on it before you entered 
keyboard help. 
This is a known bug that has been reported.


*78.   Hurry up, why don't you?
In iOS 7, there have been many changes to the user interface. While most of 
these do not impact braille users directly, there is one that can affect the 
performance of your device. This is called reduced motion. Go in to settings, 
general, accessibility, and under the vision heading, turn on "reduced motion." 
This will cause less battery drain and should also speed up your device a bit 
more, as there is less demand on the processor when this feature is turned on.


**8.   But can do? I don’t think so!
Some people may be shrugging their shoulders at the title of this tip, but 
anyone who knows contracted braille will not be. For some braille users, they 
enjoy using contracted braille, but their typing speed for inputting this 
method may be slower than the device likes. If you wait too long between 
letters, for example, if you wanted to type out the word "float," you may end 
up with "fromlikeoathat." 
This is because after a few seconds, the Apple braille driver assumes that when 
you enter a single letter, you want that to be the one-word equivalent. In iOS 
7, there is a feature which allows you to turn off this automatic translation. 
Go into settings, general, accessibility, VoiceOver, braille, and then turn 
this feature off. Doing this will make it so that nothing is translated until 
you press either space or backspace. The drawback to this is that you cannot 
see words as you type them, and editing becomes rather cumbersome since you 
must hit space with 4-5 in order to translate something without hitting the 
spacebar. So 
while this may be a good feature for those who can keep track of what they're 
writing, it's a feature I'd use only when writing a document. You can always 
re-enable automatic braille translation when you are editing something if you 
wish, 
so it's just another option. Alternatively, pressing space with G from anywhere 
within the operating system will toggle between contracted and uncontracted 
braille. While it may take slightly longer to type out uncontracted braille, 
you may find that it actually saves you time in the long run since you will not 
have to go back and correct all of those mistranslations. Note that if you 
choose to type in uncontracted braille, you will need to use the computer 
braille symbols for punctuation marks and numbers such as the period (dots 4 an 
6), the question mark (dots 1-4-5-6), etc. Turning contracted braille on and 
off is a feature with 
all versions of iOS that have braille support.


**90.   The braille master is at the controls
Also new in iOS 7 is the control center, which gives you easy access to what 
Apple feels are essential controls that you need convenient access to such as 
wi-fi, Bluetooth, Do Not Disturb, and many others. While touch-screen users 
must tap the status bar and then swipe up with 3 fingers, a braille user can 
simply press space with dots 2-5 from anywhere in iOS and be presented with the 
control center. Hit a cursor routing button above the toggles to change them 
instantly. Press space with B to exit when you are done with the control center.


**10.   Get notified
Similarly, touch-screen-only users will need to tap the status bar and then 
swipe down with 3 fingers to pull up their notifications center. As a braille 
user, you can instantly pull up your notifications center by pressing space 
with dots 4-6. As before with the control center, press space with B to exit 
the notifications center.

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  • » [accesscomp] FW: three days of Dan's tips are attached - Robert Acosta