There are a variety or 40 column Braille displays, about the smallest I consider
usable for postsecondary student work that are around $5000.
Here are the major vendors:
ALVA www.aagi.com
Blazie www.blazie.com
Humanware http://www.humanware.com/E/E-frm.html
Accessibility http://www.4access.com/products/rbt.htm
Ron Stewart
-----Original Message-----
From: Woody Anna Dresner [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Tuesday, March 14, 2000 2:22 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Fw: braille style manual
Hello,
The cheapest braille display I know of is the bookworm. It has only eight
cells, but could be viable for reading and is supposed to be able to
function as a braille display for a computer, though I haven't seen it in
action except as a stand-alone unit. It costs $1695, I believe, and is
available through Arkenstone <http://www.arkenstone.org>.
Blazie Engineering makes the next cheapest braille displays, and they're
built into notetakers which have many of the functions of a palm pilot -
the ability to store files, send them to a printer, and run simple programs
like checkbook managers and VT100 terminal programs. They can be used
successfully with computers as braille displays. The 18-cell version is
about $3500, and the 40-cell version costs about $5500.
I think Blazie Engineering sells the PowerBraille, which is strictly a
braille display and has no notetaker abilities, for $5000 or a little less.
I hope this helps.
Regards,
Anna Dresner
EASI's online workshop on Barrier-free Educational Technology,
Barrier-free Ed-Tech, begins March, 13.
Making campuses accessible is the right thing to do,
and it is the law. For information, go to
http://www.rit.edu/~easi and click on workshops.
EASI's online workshop on Barrier-free Educational Technology,
Barrier-free Ed-Tech, begins March, 13.
Making campuses accessible is the right thing to do,
and it is the law. For information, go to
http://www.rit.edu/~easi and click on workshops.
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