[Reader-users] hand held reader

Barbara Loos beloos at neb.rr.com
Thu Mar 29 13:06:46 CST 2007


It does take some patience to do this.  It depends also on whether or not 
there are other difficulties.  For example, I have been working with someone 
who has macular degeneration who really likes what the reader can do.  Her 
hands are somewhat shaky and it is difficult for her to hold the reader up 
and steady, so those are concerns.  She's continuing to try with it.

I agree with whoever it was (probably several people) that the best thing to 
do would be to find a way for her to try it possibly more than once to see 
what she thinks of it.

Barbara Loos

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Larry & Becky Pierce" <lbpeewee at verizon.net>
To: <reader-users at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2007 4:19 AM
Subject: [Reader-users] hand held reader


Specifically, if my mom wanted to make a box of macaroni and cheese, and she 
used the hand held reader, would she be able to zero in on the directions 
easily without getting all the other writing on the box?  She is 79 and is 
dealing with our father with alzheimers.


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