Third-Party Braille Computers: Their Viability Today

By sockhopsinger, 15 November, 2024

Forum
Assistive Technology

Hello, friends. I hope this message finds all of you well. I was having a nastalgic moment the other day and was thinking of one of the first talking computer devices I had as a young man, the Braille n' Speak from Blazie Engineering. Out of curiosity, I put Blazie Engineering in my trusty DuckDuckGo browser to see what would come up. Imagine my surprise when I found that Blazie Engineering had a website up and were developing a new product. The BT Speak Pro is apparently their newest project, and out of curiosity, I then searched that on YouTube to see if there were any videos available to get a preview about it and to determine what were some of its key features.

The more I researched into the project, the more I began pondering a strange question. With smartphones advancing the way they have, are products like the BT Speak pro that have their own built-in word processors, mail clients, music players, WiFi connectivity, and a whole host of other features still useful in this day and age? Do people still get them? If so, why? If you read this post, please let me know your thoughts about third-party machines for blind folks that do essentially everything that a smartphone does. Also, Sure it has a built-in braille keyboard, and I, for one, still love typing in braille, but something like that isn't enough for me to really consider a purchase like the BT Speak Pro as viable. I am simply curious for thoughts. Also, the other big fear is that after spending not a small amount of money on a product like this, how long will a company like this really support the project before it becomes obselete, and how does that figure into your thoughts when deciding to spring for a purchase like this?

Hope everyone has a great day.

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Comments

By mr grieves on Saturday, November 23, 2024 - 19:40

Thank you - I had no idea that was possible. I will have to give it a go. That might help solve my anxiety over upgrading to newer versions of MacOs.

By TheBllindGuy07 on Monday, November 25, 2024 - 19:40

Completely off topic but if you have 512gb like me you can easily just create a secondary internal partition and only use it for beta testing. That's what I've been saying here for about 4-5 months. IF you have less than honestly just buy a small 256gb ssd and do it there.

By mr grieves on Monday, November 25, 2024 - 19:40

Oh I never realised you'd done that, even though I probably have read it on here. That's also a good idea, but I'm not sure I am confident enough to go messing with my Mac partition. A flash drive feels much safer to me.

By shuteye on Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 19:40

I'm a happy user of the braille sense 6 mini :) I personally love the blindness-specific interface design and that I can do almost everything exclusively in braille. The Sense is miles ahead of the braille note touch as well: I had that device previous and to others' comments in this thread, found it slow, unresponsive and behind. The BS6 has more custom hardware design and I think has the processing power and ram to remain relevant for quite a few years yet. My main use cases for the BS6 mini are: reading ebooks (usually while listening to multimedia at the same time on commutes and such), taking notes while making higher-phi audio recordings incase I miss anything, SSH-ing into remote servers without having to pull out my laptop, controlling my phone, sending emails and such on the fly, etc. I know third party note takers are a splurdge, but I for one find the well designed ones so worth it because as a totally blind person I can use them with far less cognitive load than a windows or mac laptop catering to an interface built for the sighted first.

The Elbraille was actually my first choice before the BS6, but when I found out it was discontinued I decided not to opt for something like the b.book: it seemed to be pretty low spec and didn't use Jaws. I didn't want to learn yet another windows screen reader lol.

By Brad on Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 19:40

It's not a problem.

I think you're right, cane training can be useful. Like you said; it's good to have the skills so that if the tech does fail, you can rely on something else.

Being lazy is ok if you have someone there with you, what happens when they're not there? I guess you could order an uber, it's what i'd do, but they can get quite expencive.

My mobility trainer talked to me about that stuff too, I have a talking microwave from their department.

I have no idea when I got it, I want to say I've had it for about 5 years now but I'm not sure.

As for the mobility trainers, there really does need to be more of them than there is at the moment.

By Brian on Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 19:40

That Braille Sense 6 Mini sounds sweet. Oh, and @Brad, talking microwaves sound cool, but I would be content just to have a tactile microwave.
More affordable I would think...

By Brad on Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 19:40

I got it for free but yes, i'd not actuallly buy it and would buy a cheepish one.

By Brian on Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 19:40

Those talking microwaves are something like $400. But hey, never say no to free tech! 😃

By Tyler on Tuesday, November 26, 2024 - 19:40

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

I recently got a microwave that works with Alexa, and while I did initially require sighted assistance to scan the setup code, I find I much prefer to give quick cooking instructions by voice than to rely exclusively on braille labels or tactile adhesives. I've never used a talking microwave before, but judging by the last comment, they sound much more expensive than any microwave I've seen.

By Brad on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

I'm not sure why the microwave oven I have has been discontinued but the one I've found is for £265.

By Brian on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Of course, I have only seen the talkie microwave listed on Maxi-Aids, and Blind Mice Mart. Both are overpriced websites. The Amazon link above has the seller listed as Maxi-Aids.
Hmm, I wonder what shipping and handling would be for a device like that overseas. 🤔

By Travis Roth on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

I can appreciate the idea of a streamlined customized interface especially when it comes to Braille. I'd kind of not mind trying a BrailleSense out just to see what they have come up with. But as aluded to by others, one of the big problems I see with these custom devices is they fall behind. I just checked the Hims page* and it currently shows tech specs of Android 12. Googling tells me Android 12 was released in October 2021, so three years old now. While Android traditionally is more fragmented than iOS, I'd stil expect a number of mainstream Android apps to start failing. No one should be surfing with a three year old web browser for security reasons alone. I'd be much more potentially interested if they both showed a trackrecord and commitment to keeping it up to date. If it is going to replace and be the equivalent to a minstream device, and charge a premium to do so, it has to earn it.
* https://www.himsintl.com/en/blindness/view.php?idx=30

By Justin Harris on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Travis, I was about to write exactly the same thing. I'd love to check one out just to see how the interface is and such, but would be concerned about the device falling behind. The nice thing about this ElBraille is that even though I had to do a tiny bit of hacking, I was able to get Windows 11 up and running on it. I doubt you could do that with a Braille Sense.

By TJT 2001 on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

You shouldn't buy a BrailleSense if you want the experience of using an Android tablet with refreshable braille. You should buy a BrailleSense if you want a braille-first interface with streamlined apps designed by SELVAS which has Android—and therefore the Google ecosystem—as its core.

If a person feels that the default apps on the BrailleSense won't meet their needs and that they will need to rely predominantly on third-party apps, a mainstream device would be much more suitable because they will have the benefit of a touchscreen—the manner in which Android and those apps were designed to be used—and they would not have to deal with the idiosyncrasies of the BrailleSense.

However, I'm not necessarily saying that an Android power user will find the default apps basic or that they will consider their access to the third-party apps to be limiting. A power user may appreciate the ability to launch virtually any default app with one keystroke from almost anywhere on the device. They might also find that the keystrokes that allow them to access functions within apps allow them to work more efficiently than navigating around a touchscreen to the extent that performing tasks like sending emails, formatting text, navigating around textbooks and listening to podcasts are easier with the default apps than their third-party equivalents which lack this functionality. A user who is truly in harmony with their technology can subconsciously come to know when the default apps won't meet their needs and then can use third-party apps to supplement the default apps, just as many of us come to know whether a smartphone or a computer is the better device for a particular task.

Here is an interview with someone who was able to use many features of the BrailleSense 6 in his job as a music teacher in a mainstream school.

By Justin Harris on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Interesting points. So from what I understand, it would be kinda like having my old BrailleNote Mpower back, but also the ability to run actual Android apps too. Obviously I know the operating systems and applications are different, but it sounds like a lot of the system being built from the ground up would feel a lot more like KeySoft than an Android tablet with a Braille display.
Does it have its own screen reader or does it use Talkback? If it has its own, how well does it handle apps from the play store? Is the experience as good at least, as what Talkback would offer?

By TJT 2001 on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Yes, the experience would be very similar to using KeySoft with the benefit of having access to Android. You'd be able to get an even closer experience if you purchased a BrailleNote Touch Plus (although that isn't a good idea because it was released in 2019).

The BS6 uses its own screen reader when accessing Android apps so that there is a level of continuity between the experience of using the default apps and third-party apps. I don't actually own a BrailleSense 6, but the consensus from the people I've spoken to is that there are thousands of usable apps, and Android apps that weren't designed with accessibility in mind tend to be more accessible than iOS apps which weren't designed to be accessible.

By Justin Harris on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Very very interesting. It's out of my price range for sure, but definitely has me interested. Especially if they have a mini with all the same features. Would be nice if these companies would do payment plans even for those who don't have the best credit.

By Brad on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

I think you'd have to get a plug adapter for UK plugs to work with US sockets, also i'm not sure if places like the RNIB and Cobolt ship to the US but you're more than welcome to take a look.

By Brian on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Argh, foiled by your funky wall plugs! *Shakes fist*

By Brad on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Muhahahahaha, UK plugs for the win.

By OldBear on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

Ya, looks like you all over in the UK use something closer to what we use for laundry dryers and oven/ranges on all your electrical outlets, and it's 50Hz, instead of 60Hz; major buck converter for that. We mostly have split single faze outlets with 120V at 60Hz for typical appliances. I'll admit ours is a little crazy because it has to be backward compatible to systems designed over a hundred years ago that are grandfathered in and still in use.

By Brian on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

I'd still get an adapter, if it meant getting a talk in microwave for around $200 cheaper. For seriously.

By Lee on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

At the moment Pound to dollar means we get %25 roughly off the dollar price. So logically this means that £250 would be a %25 increase for you guys. Or at least I think thats right. Bit confusing.

By Brad on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 19:40

the google says it's $316 so with shipping and all that, you'd probably end up paying a similar price.

By OldBear on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 22:40

Apparently, a US to UK step up transformer and converter is about fifty dollars. I didn't check the current limitations, though, and it would be easy to overload something with a microwave. Thought it would be about twice that price.

By Brian on Wednesday, November 27, 2024 - 23:40

At this rate, I may as well just stick to US prices and US merchandise. 🙂‍↔️🙄

By Kushal Solanki on Thursday, November 28, 2024 - 00:40

Hey.
Question for the person who mentioned about using SSH on the BS 6 to remote in to a server how do you do that?
What app SSH app do you use?

By OldBear on Thursday, November 28, 2024 - 02:40

Right.
But you know, if you learn to cook on a hobo stove made from a coffee can, and fueled by a tea candle or a bunch of cardboard and paper towels, you could save even more money...

By Brian on Thursday, November 28, 2024 - 05:40

I said it before, and I will say it again. When the zombie apocalypse happens, I'm hanging out with you, OldBear. 🐻🧟‍♂️🧟‍♀️🧟🧟‍♀️🧟‍♂️🧟🧟