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Originally Posted by sponge
Don't think of it as a PocketPC. Think of it more as a DOS prompt with a screenreader, and it'll make a lot more sense.
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The device actually uses Microsoft's Pocket PC operating system and a version of Freedom Scientific's JAWS screen-reading software. The standard parts of Pocket PC (Calendar, Notes, Contacts, Mail, Internet Explorer, etc.) are accessible using the keyboard for input and speech or Braille for output, except for navigating parts that we see on the screen using the keyboard and voice. For example, we can see the "Monthly view" calendar on the screen. The blind person navigates, using the keyboard, by viewing each day's "square."
Equating this to "DOS prompt with a screenreader" is rather unfair because this isn't DOS. Freedom Scientific licensed Pocket PC operating system from Microsoft and tailored its version of JAWS and the hardware to accommodate it. A good piece of evidence for this is the fact that the applets under "Settings" from the Start Menu actually includes those applets that would control a visual display if the hardware included that.
How do I know this? My girlfriend is totally blind and uses the early version of this device. Freedom Scientific in the past made a device that essentially was, to use your words, "DOS prompt with a screenreader," but this is not that. This is a true Pocket PC with speech and now Braille.