[accesscomp] TEK TALK OF OCTOBER 29 IS NOW ARCHIVED

  • From: "Bob Acosta" <boacosta@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "Bob Acosta" <boacosta@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 6 Nov 2012 17:25:48 -0800

    Posted by: admin

ACCESSIBLE WORLD TEK TALK PRESENTS DAN WEIRICH, VP, Sales and marketing,  GW
MICRO TO DISCUSS AND DEMONSTRATE THE READ EASY has been posted to the Tek
Talk Archives Archives and can also be found on the front page of
http://accessibleworld.org/ under the "Recent Content" heading.

The link to the full description of the archive is below:
http://accessibleworld.org/content/accessible-world-tek-talk-presents-dan-weirich-vp-sales-and-marketing-gw-micro-discuss-and

The link to download the file is below:
http://accessibleworld.org/sites/default/files/tt-10-29-12-easyreade-move.mp3

Tek Talk Archives description:

GW Micro Announces ReadEasy Move

Oct-8-2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

GW Micro, Inc. Announces ReadEasy Move!

GW Micro is proud to announce the ReadEasy Move, the first in a new
generation of stand-alone digital capture reading systems specifically
designed for individuals who are blind or visually impaired.

The ReadEasy Move is compact, stylish, lightweight, and easy-to-use.  The
ReadEasy Move has an intuitive user interface consisting of only 6 buttons
making it the ideal reading solution for people of all ages, whether they are
4 or 104.

"This system is the new generation in the ReadEasy product line," said Dan
Weirich, Vice President of Sales and Marketing for GW Micro. "It's unique,
compact design makes it one of the smallest reading machines available on the
market."

According to Weirich, a person who is blind or visually impaired can read any
printed text by simply placing the text under the ReadEasy Move's camera
and pressing a button.  The system takes a picture and then begins reading
the text in a clear, human-sounding voice within a matter of seconds.  The
buttons located on the ReadEasy Move are tactile, making it easy to use
regardless of your level of vision.

ReadEasy Move customers can add a Keypad Feature Pack to enable more advanced
functionality to the ReadEasy Move, such as the ability to save and open
files to and from a USB flash drive.  Individuals with low vision can obtain
additional benefits from using the ReadEasy Move Low Vision Pack, which
allows you to connect the device to a computer monitor to magnify text in
addition to reading it.  Add the optional Low Vision Touch Pack (touchscreen
monitor sold separately) and instantly turn the ReadEasy Move into a reading
system that supports multi-touch gestures much like those used on the iPhone
and iPad!  Low vision users can quickly move around a document, adjust
magnification and start reading using intuitive touch gestures!

For customers who need access to documents in foreign languages, such as
Spanish, French, German, Italian, and others; additional languages can be
easily added to the ReadEasy Move.  The ReadEasy Move is the first
stand-alone reading machine that can recognize and switch between multiple
languages automatically (additional languages sold separately).

The ReadEasy Move is now shipping so place your order today! Customers within
the U.S. can contact GW Micro or your local GW Micro dealer to order or for
more information.  You can reach GW Micro by phone at (260) 489-3671 or via
email at sales@xxxxxxxxxxx, or learn more about the ReadEasy Move on the web
at ReadEasy Move Information.
Contact:
Dan Weirich, VP of Sales and Marketing
dan@xxxxxxxxxxx
(260) 489-3671

Presenter: Dan Weirich, VP Sales and marketing, GW Micro

Follow Accessible World on Twitter:
http://www.twitter.com/accessibleWrld

The Accessible World, a division of Helping Hands For The Blind, a 501(c)(3)
not-for-profit organization, seeks to educate the general public, the
disabled community and the professionals who serve them by providing highly
relevant information about new products, services, and training opportunities
designed specifically to eliminate geographic and access barriers that
adversely affect them.
http://accessibleworld.org/



Robert Acosta, President
Helping Hands for the Blind
Email: boacosta@xxxxxxxxxxx
Web Site: www.helpinghands4theblind.org

You can assist Helping Hands for the Blind by donating your used computers to 
us. If you have a blind friend in need of a computer, please mail us at the 
above address.

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  • » [accesscomp] TEK TALK OF OCTOBER 29 IS NOW ARCHIVED - Bob Acosta