Humanware Products: Are They for AppleVis Users?

By Assistive Inte…, 1 July, 2024

Forum
Assistive Technology

I got a flyer from Humanware through the door today. It was printed of course. I use my Ray-Ban Meta glasses to read it.

They wanted me to know about some summer savings on some of there products. People are very sensitive to price on appleVis, so I thought I would share a few details with you and see what you think:

StellarTrek:
The StellarTrek is an advanced AI-powered GPS and OCR (Optical Character Recognition) assistant designed to enhance autonomy for visually impaired individuals. This innovative device combines state-of-the-art GPS functionality with a tactile interface, providing precise voice-guided navigation. Its built-in camera and AI capabilities can identify street addresses, entrances, landmarks, and pedestrian crossings, ensuring accurate guidance for the final stages of your journey.
Additionally, the StellarTrek offers barcode scanning for product details, color recognition, and text-to-speech functionality for reading various printed materials aloud. It features anti-veering technology for safer pedestrian crossings and boasts an all-day battery life, making it a reliable companion for independent travel.
The price for the StellarTrek is £970.00, discounted from the original price of £1,049.00, as part of the summer savings event running from 1st July to 31st August 2024. This offer is available exclusively to private customers.

Hark Reader:
The Hark Reader is an innovative device designed to convert printed text into speech quickly and accurately, using natural human-sounding voices. It operates seamlessly out of the box—simply place a document on its surface, and it will start reading aloud without any buttons to press. The device is portable with a sleek, compact, and foldable design, making it easy to store and move. An optional keypad allows for advanced navigation through documents.
The price for the Hark Reader with a pre-installed battery is £1,475.00, discounted from the original price of £1,595.00. The summer savings event runs from 1st July to 31st August 2024, available exclusively to private customers.

Conclusion:
These products are not for me. They probably won’t ever be for me. I am in my mid-fifties now. Who are they for?
Older people? My dad is only 3 months older than Joe Biden – he, my dad, has an Android phone and a Fire tablet – he can see just fine, but if he neded to I think he could manage with our kind of Assistive echnology.
So, are these sort of products aimed at very young children? If so, that is OK, but at what age do they start using the good stuff?

Another thing they were offering:

The Victor Reader Stream 3 is a handheld digital media player designed for visually impaired individuals, enabling easy access to a variety of audio content. This pocket-sized device supports listening to books, newspapers, web radio, music, podcasts, and other online resources. It features a fully tactile interface and provides up to 15 hours of battery life, ensuring extended usage.
The device is user-friendly, allowing seamless integration of all media content into one portable player. Its sleek design with easy-to-grip edges makes it convenient to carry around. Additionally, it offers a superior text-to-speech experience in multiple languages, further enhancing its usability.
The price for the Victor Reader Stream 3 is £388.00, discounted from the original price of £420.00, available during the summer savings event from 1st July to 31st August 2024, exclusively for private customers.

I had a Stream 2, back in the day, before the iPhone. Once I got an iPhone it went into a draw. It stayed there. You could get an andoid phone for less, it might not last as long on a single charge…but it would do so much more.
I hope Humanware appreciate this free advertising. Especially as they didn’t even have the decency to send me there brochure in an accessible format.

Options

Comments

By TheBllindGuy07 on Saturday, June 29, 2024 - 03:12

If an assistive tech company can't send adds in an accessible format I don't know what is more pathetic than this. I honestly once loved humanware, the VR stream 2 was (and still is for most user) an excelent product with respectable build and software quality. Ever since the purchase from this other american company humanware *in my humble opinion* as a blind user is making product more and more expensive with crappy hardware even by assistive tech standard. Just the $7000 braillenote touch 32+ tells a lot with something like android 8 or so running inside and we're in 2024. Some of my info might be out of date but if this was outdated then it's just likely worst now. The stream 3 and the bi 40x have horrible boot and shutdown time. Are some of these useful to a niche group who don't know better? Probably. Are they worth the expensive price with a... decency of software and quality control they seem to lack? Probably not. Have I the right to have any say in whatever decision each individual takes at its own discretion about whether to buy/test these or not? Absolutely not :)

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, June 29, 2024 - 03:12

I wory some people will go to an open day at a local society and be sold this crap at these prices! They won't know any better, the local people won't either and only the sale director wil be hapy.

But as I said, these products aren't for me.

By Joshua on Saturday, June 29, 2024 - 03:12

i can do all of the stuff that these devices can do on my android phone so i don't see the point of them, never did, probly never will

By Chamomile on Saturday, June 29, 2024 - 03:12

I don't mind the idea of the Stellar Trek. I've tried the Victor Reader Trek and it didn't work well for me as a city person, though. I would be curious to check it out.

I have a Brailliant BI40x and love it, though I should use it more than I do. I'm a lot faster reading with a screen reader compared to braille, and only just finished learning Grade 2 this year.

I wouldn't be entirely opposed to getting a braille notetaker, if they kept it to recent versions of Android and if they didn't cost an arm and a leg. Like, it would be great if I can run my Dungeons and Dragons character spreadsheets, draft some stories, possibly read Kindle books and read recipes on it. Yes, I know I can use my iPhone but I hate how the Kindle app works with my braille display and reading recipe websites on it sucks (though I've got a solution for that).

I can't comment on the quality of HumanWare products. I've only been blind for 4 years. But I'm fairly happy with my Brailliant.

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

It's never really been for me ever since i've gotten a phone.

This tech just costs so much for stuff that usually isn't worth it.

Oh and to answer your question, it's aimed at older people like yourself.

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I hardly used the treck. As for the brailllenote, I was basically given one day of training with it in school and that was it so I never really used it.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I think you are right (I know, things I never thught I'd say) that these things are aimed at older people. I was OK wiht that twenty or even ten years ago, but as I said about my own dad - he is well sotcked in the area of tech and wouldn't accept having to pay so much for so little.

That makes me think these sorts of things don't have a lot of time left to live. But what do I know, I couldn't beleive there was a Stream 3!

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Or at least I assume they do. These companies will be around for quite a while.

I like the idea of a computer with a braille display atached, some companies are doing this now but I forget what ones they are, but I don't think I like the idea enough to buy one when I have a perfectly fine laptop and will probably think that way for the wrest of my life.

Some people love tech like this and for them it's amazing! But for me, it's not needed.

By inforover on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Although not perfect. The BrailleNote Touch Plus still runs Android 8, as someone mentioned on this thread. HIMS BrailleSense 6 runs Android 12, which at least is still supported by Google. The HIMS SensePlayer, which is a direct competitor to the Stream, is also better. It’s basically an Android 12 device with a camera as well. Not saying HIMS is perfect, because they’re not, they’re just not as money-stealing.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Why not carry a small, wirless, multi-functional Braile display along with your phone? I've heard all the arguements, but struggle to agree, especially in 2024.

By WellF on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Selling basically a mix of VoiceVista / SoundScape and google maps in a box for 1000 dolars is completely nonsense. They're basically taking advantage of people who didn't adapt to the touchscreens.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

It is the same with the VRS3 - an Andorid phone or even an iPhone SE costs about the same and you get so much more - but both have a touch screen! I hadn't thought of it like that. This is what I came for!

By TheBllindGuy07 on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Device multimedia audio player should be there just like how kindle and other e reader devices are. For the rest... I only trust orbit research at this point. They know what they are doing, and yes hims are very good with software from what I read online.

By inforover on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I personally use mine because it is one device. I want to write books for a living and I find it easier having something in front of me which does everything. Braille, speech, edit etc. I have always found that using a Braille display and laptop and or phone comes with problems and kind of disrupts my work flow. I do agree that they are pointless for 90% of users though.

By Holger Fiallo on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

In my phone, I am able to use audible, bard mobile, overcast, youtube, amazon prime, and so on. 1 universal device for most purposes.

By TJT 2001 on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Many people who use the Victor Reader Stream and StellarTrek also use a smartphone. They buy HumanWare products because they like using physical controls for things. Some additionally use assistive technology hardware products because not using a smartphone for all possible tasks extends its battery life.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

These comments are full of of good reasons to spend money on things that you can already do or could do for less or just because it is easier. Everytime someone sees a product being talked about they personally don't like or need or want or think deserves to exits, we get the finger wagging "some blind people aren't working and don't have loads a money!!

Some aren't and some don't, but it has been known for years that there is always money for gadgets in the blind community - so I would like to suggest it is time to put that tired old trope to bed!

I'm off to pay $900 for a primary mobility device that will consume $20 of my resources every month I use it!

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

You live in the UK, you probably get around £1200 a month, you are very very lucky to get that money.

I get it too but I also know that in America, you'd be lucky if you got $800 a month, that depends on what state you're in of course, so the price thing is a very good argument as to why people might not want to get these products.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

But not all the people telling me why they waste money on Humanware tech are from the UK.

And, BTW, PIP isn't even half that for most blind and visually impaired people. They may get the enhanced or higher rate of the mobility componeant, but as far as I know, blind and visually impiared people don't typically recieve the higher or enhance care componeant.

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Now then, I love my technology. A sirloin roast is just cooking very nicely in the sous vide bath as I write, with temperature at 58 degrees and 3 hours 59 minutes remaining on the timer. I know all of that because of the dear old Instant Pot Pro Plus which I have set up through the Instant brands app. I took some beautiful photos of my recent trip to Devon using PiccyBot. I can ask my Echo to make a cup of tea and it will...erm, boil the kettle and then leave me to make it mi' bleedin' self. I can emboss a document directly from my dear old iPhone.

and yet, I include the stream and the brailliant in my armoury. Here's why.

Let's start with the stream: it's much, much more efficient for learning choral parts. i could use voiceDream, but that doesn't allow me to go back a second or so just to hear that last part of 'mourn, ye afflicted children' again. It's also much more efficient when I'm recording my students' advocacy classes or conducting their advocacy assessments. That one's a bit more difficult to explain but, to give one example, I can insert a bookmark with the push of one button rather than fiddling around with explore by touch or swiping all over the place. Makes it much easier to give feedback.

"Oh come on, Bingo, surely those are only two rather minor use cases?"

Nope, sorry, you're talking out of your hat. Whether something is minor or not is a value judgment, so stick that in yer pipe and smoke it!

Now then, let's turn to the brailliant: in summary, it's very useful to have a low-tech gadget sometimes. I make a lot of sensitive notes - things that I do not want stored online in any way. The Brailliant's so last century connectivity offering here is priceless. Plus it allows me to write in BRF - a format sufficiently impenetrable to satisfy our corporate data protection policy. I can connect to the iPhone if I want to, or forget about the iPhone for a bit if I'd rather. To be able to read a book without consuming iPhone battery is also very useful from time to time. Indeed, I would go as far as saying that the brailliant's simplicity makes it a brilliant product. if there's one product line I don't understand, it's these braille note takers come tablets, like the brailleNote Touch. They really are neither one thing nor the other.

"Ah but hang on, bingo old lad, don't you realise how much you're paying for things your phone can do anyway?"

well, first of all I'll thank you not to impute scenility to me in that fashion - as if I'd pay that kind of money without realising! secondly, I shall not repay the complement in kind and shall assume that you were able to garner from the immediately preceeding sentence that I am, indeed, aware of how much I have to pay for this sort of thing. Thirdly, however, it's no less money than some of you phone for everything people spend on your latest glasses, phones, iPads and what have you, with all the duplication you purchase by reason thereof - is that not correct? I think we're back to deuce.

I'm 42, by the way. turn 43 towards the end of this month. I'm not old, but not young either. Middle-aged. Yet I feel that the brailliant was intended for me and I also like the stream. I also like the good stuff. what does that make me? answers in the comments, please.

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

One thing you speech merchants won't realise is that I misspelt senility in the previous post. the great thing about the Brailliant is I can proofread my documents even when orfline and away from mi' dear old phone.

By Brian on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Disclaimer: I am not judging anyone here. I am asking because I am genuinely curious, and a little confused by the subject of this thread.

What is the purpose of this thread? From the OP, it appears that Humanware products are overpriced and underdeveloped. Then I read further down and someone is complaining that we should all just stop whining about prices and just go out and buy stuff.

Just because?

I personally cannot comment and/or review on any of the Victor Stream devices, as I never had one. I ended up with American Printing House's "Bookport Plus", if memory serves. Like Bingo mentioned, these devices are pretty nice for note taking, and reading aloud documents; whether an eBook or whatever.

I will end here by simply saying, the same damned thing I say when somebody pulls an Android vs Apple, or PC vs Mac thread; Whatever works for the person who owns said device(s) is what is best (for them).

Damn anyone who says anything else, whether it's cost or need, if someone says they cannot afford something, don't judge them for their choice. It is their money after all. 🤷

By mr grieves on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

When I started using the Hable I did appreciate using something tactile and not having the screen and part of me wondered what a Hable phone would be like. But I've not used it in a while - it just seems quicker to just use the screen.

But there is something satisfying about using a device with physical keys, and that feeling of it being made for us and us alone is nice.

But I think if I was in the market for a simpler, tactile way to do what I can do on the iPhone I'd probably buy a Blindshell Classic 2 as it's cheaper that the Stellar and can do a lot more. (Bearing in mind I've not used one just heard about them)

I definitely think we are better off using the full power of a mainstream device if at all possible.

But I think the phone can be quite complex to use. Sometimes I don't get the swipes right, or I'm doing it too quick or the phone just doesn't like me. Maybe it takes a few goes to get the notifications to stay in place or whatever. And then a firmware update breaks it.

But I couldn't see myself moving beyond the iPhone, other than maybe Android if I ever got brave enough (unlikely). Humanware products seem very expensive for what they are.

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I think I got at this earlier on but I'll have another go, in the interests of clarity: the discussion, and similar ones like this, appear to proceed on the basis that, if you use these Humanware or blindness products, you somehow are eschewing a mainstream device. Not a valid syllogism, my friends, not a bit of it. alternatively, people seem to think that you're somehow a bit of a bleeder because you could do all these things with one device, so there's no reason to have two. Jonathan Mosan, I've noted, is well into his one-devicery; but with Jonathan, it's one-devicery with a difference. He admits with refreshing candour that he doesn't himself want more than one device, but at the same time he's splendidly open-minded and understands that one-devicery isn't quite so important to others. Speaking for myself, I'm well aware that I could do everyting I wanted to with one device, but not in the way to which I am used. Not in the way that is splendidly conservative. Not in the way that annoys everyone who doesn't understand why we don't all opt for one device. Not in the way that baffles all you mainstream merchants. The more I think about it, the more I find myself thinking that it's worth using these specialist products because it gets some people, not to put too fine a point on it, rather cross! You can't put a price on stuff like that.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

My original intention was to highlight what, to me, seemed some rather expensive, rather basic and somewhat unnecessary, to me, products.
I acknowledged in a later comment that people had gifen many and varied cojent reasons for these products being good value to them. I accepted this and simply asked people to not instanly attack something they didn't appreciate with the cry of 'we are blind and poor' - which is exactly the question I had asked and ansered.

I have posted a lot about Glidance and the technology involved, but most of what I get bakc is whining about the cost (which is less than most Humanware products) or moaning about the subscription, which is less than Netflix UHD Multi-screen or whatever it is called!

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I get the high end of PIP and ESA, oh sorry, Universal credit, they've changed the name.

I get what you mean, mr bigo sir. All jokes aside, yes, using multiple devices can be useful. It's great that we can do all of this stuff on one device but at the same time, having a braille device could allow you to keep up with your reading, and it's just a good idea to strech the old brain sometimes.

By Brian on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I am fairly certain that people who "claim" to have only one device, are chalk full of the wonderful brownies that puppies make on lawns the world over. I myself have several devices, though some are rarely used. I mentioned above my Book Port Plus. I also have an old Olympus Digital Recorder (love, love that thing!), my iPhone of course, an Alexa device, a Fire Stick attached to an off brand Smart TV, and 2 laptops. Oh, and an Xbox.

Every one of these devices have some form of "accessibility" in them, in the form of voice guidance and/or a fully functional screen reader.

I also used to have an old RefreshaBraille, a talking scientific calculator, and a talking graphing calculator. Lost these last 3 devices over the years, probably when my ex and I went our separate ways.

I mean, I could say I have "one" device, when talking about my iPhone, and I do a lot on that device, but no, I do not believe anyone out there truly only has one assistive device.

Seems too limiting.

On a completely separate note, I think I love you, Bingo! Your posts always entertain. 😍😇

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I see what you mean,, I have a laptop, a ps5 and a phone.

By mr grieves on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I don't think there is an argument that you have one device for absolutely everything, although I'm sure it's possible. I have plenty scattered around. I guess with some of these products, though, is that they sound like they are a similar form factor as the phone and do the same things as it can do, but just a lot less of them. As opposed to my Echos which are entirely different, or if I had a ps5 then that's also not really comparable to a phone.

But I think a lot of it is just how much you like to use something. I've started using my Meta Ray-bans for all sorts of things I could have used my phone for, but just didn't really want to. With blindness stuff threre is always that feeling that we have products we need to use, but it's also OK for us to have products we just want because they are nice.

On the subject of the cost, and I might be repeating myself al little from another thread, but it's all about the value you personally get from something as well as the affordability. Take Glide, it probably is very good value for money if you are going to use it a lot. If you aren't, then it might not be even if you could afford it. And with Humanware if you spend a few hundred quid on something you could do with your phone but you use it all the time and enjoy it, then it has good value for you.

Talking personally, if I come on these threads and say I don't see the point in something, I am meaning that as much a declaration of ignorance and I am interested to understand what it is that I am missing.

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

These topics are always good means of poking the bear - in this case, the blindness mainstream bear. why did they ever get rid of the brailleNote Apex? What a fine product that was! Anyone remember the nice little touches like indicating the start of a new paragraph by indenting two cells? Your bloody iPhone doesn't do that sort of thing! Then again, nor does the Brailliant (at least, if it does, I do not know how it does).

Brad, PIP is not the same as Universal Credit. Bingo is in receipt of the former, which he spends on multiple devices that do the same thing - ovens and microwaves, for example - but the latter is not open to him on account of his earning too much money using the Stream and Brailliant to give feedback to students on their, oftentimes, mediocre advocacy performances. This is in furtherance of their ambitions to be barristers, of course. Some of them, I have to say, would be better baristas than barristers. Now a barista is not a barrister - two different entities which, unlike the Brailliants and iPhones of this world, perform two different functions...though I suppose a barrister could make coffee as well as represent you in court. In fact, Bingo can do precisely that. so why would anyone bother with a barista when a barrister can do exactly what a barista does, and more?

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

For £450 an hour!

I'm sure Bingo is worth it, but even Nespresso would cost less.

By TheBllindGuy07 on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I've heard many great things from braillenote apex from nostalgic users.

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Oh I know that, I was just trying to say I get PIP and ESA or as they're going to call it in the future; Universal credit.

Oh and we got a masiv upgrade this year bingo bongo, a masiv 10 pounds or so extra, woooo! I can nearly by an extra subway meal deel with that. AH the UK.

By OldBear on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

And hasn't used a Humanware product since a kerfuffle twenty years ago between Humanware and Freedom Scientific over updating something to some greater number of bits that left an already ancient Keynote Gold, Stand-Alone synthesizer useless with Windows XP.

By Holger Fiallo on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

You know the saying of making an assumption. Will not say it because my comment will be remove. Using iPhone to listen to my overcast, bard mobile and audible for books,. Enjoy your 4th of July if you are in the US. Take care.

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Why do you use a Perkins for so much more money when one of those pocket hand frames will do the job just as well? anyway who needs Braille when you've got lovely synthetic speech in everything these days? when tutors become tooters, undue becomes undo, and there's no difference between helping your Uncle Jack off a horse and helping your uncle jack off a horse? Who wouldn't want to live in a world like that?

Just remember your Subway meal deals are taxpayer funded if you're using your universal credit for such purchases. Bingo already pays far too much tax for discernible returns and he might well thwart the system by simply choosing to work less hard.

By Andy Lane on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I’d very much hope we’re above shaming one another in that manner. It’s behavior any competent parent would have discouraged and I don’t mean to shame you in return, we generally have fun with our differences but lording it over people who rightfully claim support from a system designed to do exactly that is a step too far for me. I will stand up for those being punched down on. We’re better or at least should be better than that. It’s important to be aspirational isn’t it dear boy! I am confident you wouldn’t mean to shame but a little more awareness of how our off the cuff comments can put people down will make a world we can all be proud to call our homes for the duration of our time here.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Don't all blind people have the benefit of an international higher education where you come from?

By OldBear on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I use the Perkins brailler for making notes or labels. It is reliable to me because I am able to maintain and fix it, and I've also found I have an endless supply of paper by using the thicker pieces of junk mail. I also braille on thin sheet-aluminum to make weatherproof labels when I graft trees. I doubt the Humanware devices will do that.
If by "pocket hand frames" you mean a slate and stylus, I use those too.
Interesting that we have lost the art of composing for the spoken word...

By Andy Lane on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I’m very much looking forward to waking up in a country that has overnight strongly repudiated that type of attitude. We’ve taken a wrong turn and its time to check the map.

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

i'm sure, or at least I hope, you're joking.

I can and will use the money given to me for whatever I like. I'm very happy to keep living like this. Oh don't get me wrong; I want to work, but the uK doesn't want to hire me, i'll grant you I've not got a fancy smancy degree in anything, but, they don't want to hire me because they've never seen a blind plumber, or blind person who cuts back trees, or a blind person who goes into the suer to clean up, or any other job like that. If it involves sitting on your bum in front of a computer, I don't want to do that @bingo little, and if that makes you angry and other people from the UK to look down upon me because I want to get off of my arse but am unable to do so because of the world we live in; so be it.

By Brian on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Take it from someone who has a degree in IT, one i worked hard for, degrees matter very little these days. It is not any better over here in the US, either. No one wants to hire someone with blindness, because the truth is most hiring managers cannot see past a person's blindness.

Regarding degrees, however, it seems that everyone wants to hire people with Certifications over Degrees, hence why I am back in school.

In my late 40s, no less. . . 😖

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Laber might, might, improve stuff on that end but we'll see.

By Holger Fiallo on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Prefer that over a product for blind, they are to pricy and do not much. However what people use is best for them is OK. As the all saying goes, to each their own. Braille is important also and know it but do not use it so iPhone works well for me. Save money on getting other devices that for me serve no purpose. Be safe all and avoid the heat.

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

My remarks re Subway sandwiches were not directed at those who claim benefits. They were directed at the bleedin' tax burden, which is ridiculous. If i had meant to punch down, as Andy puts it, I would not have done so in that way. Nevertheless, I apologise for any ambiguity in these remarks - clearly there was such an ambiguity as the comments indicate.

As for the landslide built on quicksand, there'll be no argument from bingo. The outgoing government deserved it. It's them what mean taxes are so bleedin' high.

Now, having ironed out that misunderstanding I hope we can be friends again and get back to the topic about Humanware devices only being made for those who like making totally meaningless and costly purchases to do things other devices can already do. why buy a Kindle when you can just buy a paperback book?

By Bingo Little on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Apprenticeships are the really booming market de nos jours. I work in higher education and have to teach the blue-coated devils. Legal apprentices. Degrees do not mean zilch - well, not all of them. It depends what you're in it for.

By Brad on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

Let's see how this government thing goes, i'm not one for voting but am slightly hopeful for the years to come.

Anyway back on topic. I like places like sight village and love checking out all the new toys but have never gone away thinking I need that.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

I went almost every year for years and years. Every year was a waste of time, because I kept across access technology. It is great for the sort of people who don't, the sort of people who find value in tehcnology days at there local society - the sort of people who will love Humanware products. And god bless them.

As I said, the products above are not for me and probs never will be, but they are for some.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, July 6, 2024 - 03:12

the fact that I can cause troubel, even when I am not posting about AI!