I thought those were more toy than serious product.
On 4/13/16, rjaquiss <rjaquiss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hello:
In reading the various posts, I did not see a reference to Snap
Circuits from Elenco. Snap circuits are individual components mounted on
pieces of plastic. They snap onto a board which is comprised of a grid of
pegs. The snaps of the components are metal so they can be connected to each
other or with jumpers. This is one way to learn electronics at the component
level. The parts are big enough that braille labels can be attached. Hope
this helps.
Regards,
Robert
From: program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Brandon Keith Biggs
Sent: Sunday, April 10, 2016 9:26 PM
To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [program-l] Designing Electronics blind?
Hello,
Does anyone know of any tools for blind people to learn how to develop
their own electronics?
In particular, schematic diagrams, designing a PCB and how to solder.
I was looking at:
http://www.build-electronic-circuits.com/electronic-schematics/
to get the steps I need to know.
I found:
http://www.fredshead.info/2005/11/soldering-without-sight.html
on soldering blind, but that is it. Most of those links and items are almost
10 years old, so I would like something a little more recent.
Are there any lists or resources for blind electrical engineers?
Thanks,
Brandon Keith Biggs <http://brandonkeithbiggs.com/>