Hi Phil;
You have had a lot better luck with that phone than I did.
In August of last year, I purchased that phone with Talks. I had the
worst luck in the world.
Talks was just being developed. Then, the developer past away and,
things were never the same between Verizon and me.
I went with the iPhone and never looked back.
73 de Anthony w2ajv
Sent from my iPhone
On Jun 1, 2010, at 7:46 PM, Phil Scovell <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:
> My wife and I recently went to web phones through her discounted
> Verizon
> wireless services at the hospital where she works. She got her
> phone, the
> HTC Ozone, for 29 dollars and the second one, mine, was free. We
> had to get
> full internet access, $30 per month per phone, which includes
> insurance and
> all, if we bought the smart phones. This, at the moment, seems to
> be the
> only current model of phone that Verizon has which works with the
> Mobile
> Speak screen reader. We both use Mobile Speak for our screen reader
> at $275
> per phone. Sandy started out using the software screen reader
> called TALKS
> for $90 but it crashed and hung up and screwed up so many times, we
> soon
> went to Mobile Speak instead. I have been having a ball using it on
> the
> web, keeping track of appointments through a very sophisticated
> calendar
> appointment book, sending and receiving text messages and emailing
> directly
> with the phone. Another cool feature of the phone is the ability to
> record
> a digital message, attach it to a person's email address, and they
> can hear
> you talking your email instead of having to type it on the qwerty
> keyboard.
> The keyboard is good for me because they are raised buttons but hunt
> and
> peck typing is slow and it happens to be the only way you can enter
> messages. So a message this long, for example, would probably push
> you
> right off the deep end and I don't have that much more hair to pull
> out.
> You can also use voice recognition by programming it, or mapping
> commands,
> to various keys using your own voice. For example, once you map the
> date
> and time key commands using your voice, you simply press a key and
> say,
> "What is the time?" and it reads it off to you. You could program
> "Phil
> Scovell" into the voice system and it would dial my number for you.
> so it
> is quite amazingly versatile. Mobile Speak, the screen reader,
> works on
> dozens and dozens of phones, however, so there's no problem there.
> I've had
> very few problems with the software locking up and when it has
> happened,
> I've been doing something I shouldn't have been fiddling with; like
> shutting
> the entire speech system down by accidentally trying out what I
> thought was
> a feature to make the phone vibrate. Instead, it was a profile
> which turned
> the phone into a phone for sighted people. Dad gum if them there
> sighted
> folks don't get mixed up with everything a blind feller tries to do,
> haha.
> Anyhow, I know this is off topic but I figure it is worth mentioning
> on this
> type of a list.
>
> Phil.
> [log in to unmask]
> WWW.RedWhiteAndBlue.ORG
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