A Way to Weigh

It is so quick and easy to put on a few pounds, and so very hard to take them off.  So  I like to keep track of my weight.  I weigh myself at a set day and time every week. By doing so, I can catch any weight gain early on and work to reverse that trend before it is out of control.  But it is so hard (admittedly impossible) for me to see the scale when I stand on it.

I like to keep my weight private.  So asking someone to read the number to me is not my first choice.  It may also be an inconvenience or an imposition for the sighted assistant.  An alternative could be a talking scale, but that is expensive and the darned battery needs changing far too often.  The talking scale is not the most accurate scale around either.

I figured out a way to weigh.

Scale 3
Pictured:  The camera screen is displayed.  The second button from the top along the right side of the screen is the self-timer button.  If you are using your iPhone, the self-timer button will be at the top of the screen.  The red circled area shows the choice of OFF, 3 seconds, or 10 seconds for the self-timer.

I place the scale on the floor next to a counter or table.  I open the camera on my iPad and set the self-timer to 3 seconds.  Then I place it on the table with the camera lens extended over the edge of the table.  I check to be sure that the scale is visible on the iPad screen.  Then, while standing steady on the scale, I gently push the START button on the iPad’s camera.  Voila!

Scale 4
Pictured:  The iPad in on a table and on the floor to the left is the scale.
Scale 2
Pictured:  My tootsies on the scale. The image is captured by the iPad camera.

The iPad’s camera now has the image of my scale with my current weight displayed.  Now I can pinch and stretch the on-screen image to enlarge that portion of the screen.

I can see it!  I can see the image of the scale with my weight displayed.  On, so easy!  I found a way to weigh!

Tush Lights

I saw a report on TV yesterday (see the whole video report below)  about public restrooms.  It is not something we often talk about, but like it or not, we need them.  Apparently the coranavirus is making various establishments more aware of the pitfalls and hazards of these conveniences.  The prediction is that these facilities will be redesigned to address health and safety concerns.

I hate public restrooms.  They are dirty places, usually, and there is a total lack of privacy.  Add to that the modern features that are included making each public restroom work differently.  Automatic dispensers for soap and even water vary in how they operate.  Drying hands is usually such an ordeal for me that I often end up flapping my hands to air dry them.  Surely I look like a mad woman doing so!  And, of course, there is the automatic flush – sometimes.  Other times the flush is a handle, or a button – somewhere, or what?  I don’t know.

Worst of all, I hate standing on line in a large busy restroom to wait for an empty stall.  I never seem to know when a stall is available or which one it is.  Some impatient soul will nudge me or urge me on in a most unfriendly way.

Introducing Tush Lights.  Someone figured out that a red or green light in front of a stall could more easily signal the in-use status.  The one that was demonstrated in this TV report was a large light, not a tiny dot of light somewhere.  Now that got me excited!  Maybe someday we will get past this COVID era and I will get out of the house to see one in action!  I look forward to that.

Imagine getting excited about seeing a light in a public restroom!  A tush light.

Below is the video report as seen on TV.  Please forgive the commercial that comes first.

Slice Veggies, Not Fingers

Ordinary things do extraordinary things!  In this video, we talk about how to slice fruits and vegetables easily and uniformly.  With today’s simple tip, people who are blind or visually impaired can master this kitchen task safely and easily, and with a very simple and inexpensive tool.

Click on the video below. to find out more.

 

Voice Dream Reader App

I normally read audiobooks. The choices available on BARD are extensive. The quality of each and every book is outstanding. There are no robtic voices but instead are human readers who give professional performances. Many of the offerings are commercial audiobooks that have been adapted for the National Library Service. And it is all free!

Every now and then, a book comes across my radar screen that I really want to read but it is not yet available on BARD. Granted, it does not happen often, but it happens. Most of the time I simply hope that book will be made available in the near future, but sometimes I just want it now.

That happened to me this week. Someone We Know by Shari Lapena was recommended to me but was not available on BARD. So I downloaded it from bookshare. I downloaded the book to my Voice Dream reader app on my iPad.

Voice Dream provides many options. I can choose to read the print or have the print read to me. I can even switch back and forth – reading some of the print and having some of it read to me – at my discretion. Either way, everything is customizable from font size to tone of voice, and so much more.

When I choose to read the book in print on my iPad I have found that Arial or Helvetica work best for me, using font size 60. I set the bold also. I am most comfortable with standard black letters on a white background, but there are times I prefer to invert the colors, and that is an easy accommodation to make.

VD 1
Pictured: A screenshot of the Voice Dream Reader as it displays on my iPad.  This image shows Arial font in bold, size 60, black lettering on a white background. One sentence is highlighted in blue. Controls along the top and bottom of the screen are displayed.

Voice Dream will read to me, if I so choose. Sometimes I set Heather to read, sometimes Paul, and sometimes Salli. There are so many to choose from. Each of these speaks in a manner and style that is comfortable for me.

Voice Dream is not just a reader. There are additional features to help the reader get around the book or document, such as highlighting, setting bookmarks, a dictionary, and writing notes. Everything is searchable, too.

A light tap on the screen will expose controls along the top and bottom of the screen. At the top are speech and audio settings as well as other controls. At bottom are the playback audio controls.

Lots of hand gestures are available to help the reader move quickly and easily through every book and document.

Last but not least, Voice Dream imports books from various sources like bookshare and Gutenberg. It imports articles from web addresses and from scanned documents.

Voice Dream is assistive technology that puts everyone on the same page.

VD at the APP Store
Pictured: A screenshot of Voice Dream Reader as it displays in the App Store. 

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Choice Magazine Listening – and it is FREE

Choice Magazine Listening (CML) is a nonprofit organization that provides audio recordings of memorable articles, stories, interviews, essays and poems from outstanding current magazines, completely free of charge, to blind, visually impaired, physically disabled or dyslexic adults in the United States.  Based in Port Washington, NY, CML has proudly served the blind and print-disabled community since 1962.

Every winter, spring, summer and fall, thousands of eligible people in the United States receive Choice Magazine Listening in a specialized format exclusively for use by people with disabilities.  The special digital talking-book player needed to listen to CML is provided, free of charge, by the National Library Service for the Blind and Physically Handicapped, Library of Congress.  The player is portable, extremely easy to use, and offers outstanding sound quality.  These audio selections will not play on just any computer, phone, or portable player because special formatting is required for them to work.  If you are already a member of the National Library Service, then you are well on your way to even more interesting reading.

New recordings are made available four times a year.  All eligible people can download complete and unabridged selections from the CML website or, by choice, have a digital cartridge mailed to them.

For more information, please visit their website.  While you are there, sign up for their newsletter.  Enjoy!

Choice Magazine Listening

9 Ways to Hold Things Close

When I want to see things, I hold them close, very close.  Reading is possible if the letters are big enough and held close enough.  But how long can I stay hunched over a book or a chart, or whatever?  How long until my wrists and shoulders ache from holding up a heavy book or even a one-page instruction sheet?  Not very long!  It takes just minutes, sometimes just seconds, before my neck and especially my back start to ache unbearably.  So I have found ways to hold things close, and at just the right height and angle.

So here are 9 ways I have found to hold things close.

  1. Phone stand.

Belkin Phone Holder
Pictured: Silver phone stand by Belkin – one position only, but folds compactly for portability.

I bought this Belkin cell phone stand in 2012 and I still use it frequently.  I like to keep my phone propped up with speakerphone turned on, especially for group conversations.  There are times when I use it to support my iPad for skype chats. It is very small, just 3” x 5”.  It folds up compactly and is easy to carry with me.  I don’t think this particular one is still available, but you get the idea.

2.  Flexible Arm iPad stand

Free Arm Tablet Holder
Pictured: An iPad held by a flexible black metal arm that is clamped to a table. The arm can move in any direction side-to-side and up and down.

I use this for applying my makeup, and fixing my hair.  I use an old iPad that is no longer supported by Apple and so I can’t download any of the newer software.  It has become my grooming station.  I use a magnifier app to help with makeup, and the camera to snap selfies that I then enlarge (a lot) to check out the results.  With this iPad holder, I can move the arm up, down, this way or that – exactly where I need it with just a light touch.

3.  Belkin Stage Tablet stand

Belkin Tablet Holder
Pictured: Belkin tablet stand for great support of heavier tablets and more.  It can be easily positioned up and down to any angle, including parallel to the table.

The tablet can be moved up and down to almost any angle and the tablet is always held securely.  I like to place the iPad parallel to the table.  Then I hang just the camera end over the side.  I can capture documents by photo or scan and send them to my computer for enlargement and manipulation.  This stand is sturdy enough to easily hold my iPad Pro.  It also supports my big whiteboard (16″ x 20″) while I write notes and reminders.

 

4.  Bamboo Book Stand

Book Stand
Pictured: Bamboo book stand has 4 tilt positions and strong metal arms that can be positioned to hold your book in place with pages held flat.

I love bamboo because it is ecologically friendly.   This book stand is super sturdy and holds even large or heavy books open so that the pages are flat.  I prop this up to where it works best for me.

5.  Bamboo Laptop desk

Bamboo Lap Desk
Pictured:  Bamboo lap desk.  The main section of the top can lie flat or be raised to tilt in 4 positions with ledge to keep a book or laptop from slipping.  About 1/4 of the table remains flat to hold additional materials.  A side drawer pulls out to store small stationary supplies.

More bamboo, and still loving it.

This bamboo laptop desk can be placed over he lap when seated on a chair or couch, or even sitting up in bed.  I love the look and feel of this, its versatility, and its small convenient drawer.  It can be used as a flat table or angled in four different positions.

6.  Portable “tabletop” desk

Tabletop Desk
Pictured: A lap table with 4 height positions and 4 tilt positions.  It has guards to prevent items from slipping off the tabletop.  Extra wide surface and super sturdy, yet very lightweight.  Here it is on top of another table, where I like it best.

 

I call this my Tabletop Table because I use this versatile table on top of another table.  I use it for close work, like drawing, or projects that will take me some time.  With this, I have less bending forward to see what I am doing.  I am more comfortable and I can work for longer periods of time.  It sure saves my neck and back from aching.  It has a large writing surface.  This one measures 20″ x 12″ and there is a larger version also available.  The legs can be extended in a choice of heights, bringing the material closer and closer to me as needed,  and then the table can tilt to four different angles. This has become my favorite accessory.

7.  Small Tablet Stand

Lamicall Tablet Stand
Pictured: A small silver tablet holder. The base is flat on the table and rolls around the back and up in a fixed position to support the flexible area that actually holds the tablet. This part easily moves to angle the tablet.

My newest addition.  This is a small tablet stand that I use to hold my smaller whiteboard which measures 11” x 14”.  I keep it next to my computer. It makes jotting down notes or reminders easy-peasy.  Plus, it is portable and adjustable and I can easily carry my whiteboard and stand from room to room as needed.  This small tablet stand works great for me most of the time, and is one-quarter of the price (under $15) of the larger Belkin tablet stand I talked about above.

8.  Recipe Holder

Recipe Holder
Pictured:  A white plastic clothes hanger with 2 binder clips clamped on holding a large print recipe.  It is hanging from a kitchen cabinet knob.  This recipe is for homemade Play-Doh (for the kids to play with).

We used to call this a “Rube Goldberg” machine.  It is a simple DIY, and one of my favorite things.  It is a plastic (or wire) clothes hanger, like the ones you get free with purchase from department stores.  Just clip your recipe to the hanger and hang in your kitchen work area from a cabinet knob or handle.  If you don’t have a hanger with clips attached, how about using a couple of binder clips clamped onto a hanger you already have.

9.  Arms

Arms for Hugs
Pictured:  The hug!  Here the author is hugging a man.  Okay, my husband.

When you want to hold a person close, it is your arms that are most appreciated.  Hugs, everyone!

 

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Speak App for Android

This just in . . . A free app for android.

I received a message from a reader, Eyal, about the development of an app for android phones called Speak. Eyal states that this app is different because it is totally free, no purchase required, no subscription required.

I developed an app for Android only. There is currently no version for Apple.

It reads text caught on camera, identifies products by reading barcodes and detects objects and colors. It also reads pdf files and text from images stored on the device, and translates text.

The app is quite similar to Envision AI, if you know it, the main difference and my main incentive was to provide a free app. Envision AI costs 5$ a month, the subscription fee is completely justified since they use cloud services which are not free. I did the best I could with free technology for the benefit of those who cannot afford the cost.

Please take a look (if you have an Android phone) the link is below.

I do not have an android phone, so I cannot look at this app. For those of you who do, check it out. Your opinions are valuable to all of us.

Good luck, Eyal!

12 Kitchen Tips for VIPs

1.  Good lighting.  Everything starts with good lighting.  Use room lighting, spot lighting, and even motion sensor lighting in dark areas, like inside cabinets.

Cabinet Light
Pictured: Motion sensor LED light. The light comes on when the door is opened and stays lit for about 60 seconds, longer if more motion is detected. Rechargeable, and requires charging about once a month with average use.

2.  Food Prep Tray.  Place cutting board, utensils, and foods on a food prep tray, a tray with a lip around it. You will spend less time searching the floor for things that bounced, rolled, or fell.

Prep Tray
Pictured: Orange plastic tray with lip around edges sits on countertop. On the tray are knife and fork, spices including salt, garlic, and paprika, 3 whole eggs and a stainless steel mixing bowl.

3.  Stainless steel drinking cups.  Instead of glasses that are easily tipped over and too often shatter, use stainless steel drinking cups.  They are just a little more expensive up front but last and last without needing replacement, so quite cost effective in the long run.  As an added bonus, they keep cold drinks naturally colder.

Stainless Steel Cups
Pictured: 4 stainless steel drinking cups – 2 12-ounce cups and 2 8-ounce cups.

4.  Two-sided cutting board.  A cutting board with a black side and a white side provides contrast. Use the side that has the most contrast with the food you are cutting or chopping or dicing or slicing.

Cutting Board
Pictured: An admittedly difficult-to-see 2-sided cutting board. The white side is shown. The black side is face down.

5.  Sauce pans.  Sauce pans contain food and spatter better than fry pans. The end result will be the same, but less food will slip, slide, or spatter over the sides.

Sauce Pan Cooking
Pictured: Sauce pan on stovetop containing a large slotted spoon for stirring, and the ingredients for “Thunder & Lightning.”

6.  Oven-cooked bacon.  Lay strips of bacon in a single layer on the bottom of a roasting pan.  Place in a 400-degree oven for 22 minutes.  Perfect bacon every time – and without the hot grease spatter.  Google will suggest you use a cookie sheet. No! That hot grease will splash about when you remove the tray from the oven. Use a roasting pan. It is deeper and will contain the grease better. Trust me on this one!

Bacon - Oven
Pictured: Cooked bacon on baking sheet fresh out of the oven.

7.  Mandoline.  Keep your fingers safe from sharp blades by slicing with a mandoline. Not only will your fingers and fingernails stay protected, but you will end up with uniform slices of fruits and vegetables, and more.

Mandoline
Pictured: A mandoline for safe and uniform slicing and its food holder. The food holder has a large knob for holding the food firmly in place for slicing.

8.  Spice jar labels.  Index cards (cut to fit) with spice names written with bold markers can be wrapped around spice jars and secured with a rubber band. See blog post “Spice Things Up” for details.

3 Spice Jars labeled
Pictured: 3 spice jars boldly labeled for curry, cinnamon, and cumin. Rubber bands hold the labels in place.

9.  Bump dots.  Place bump dots on microwave and oven and other appliance buttons to easily identify the location of buttons you use frequently. This ensures that you will consistently press the desired button, and you will also do so in less time.  Bump dots are available in many sizes, shapes, and colors.  If you know any people who are blind or visually impaired, odds are they have bump dots to spare.  You only need a few.

Bump Dots
Pictured: Assorted bump dots including flat felt dots, round cork dots, raised round orange dots, raised black round and square dots, and clear round raised dots. Many other sizes, shapes and colors are also available.

10.  Spice ladles.  Spice ladles can be dipped easily into spice jars and other condiments for removal of just the right amount.  Avoid spills and waste.  See blog post “4-Inch Ladles” for details.

Spice Ladles comparison
Pictured: A jar of paprika with 3 spice ladles, a soup ladle, and a teaspoon.

11.  Double spatula.  A double spatula makes turning pancakes, french toast, hamburgers, and more, an easy task.

IMG_0203
Pictured: A double spatula – 2 spatulas with a nonstick finish that are connected in order to work together as tongs or flippers.

12.  Silicone trivets.  Multi-purpose silicone trivets, typically 8-inches in diameter, can be used as hot pads, potholders, coasters, and more.  They can easily be trimmed, if desired.  Because of their nonslip properties, I find them most beneficial as nonslip pads for mixing bowls, hot pots, serving bowls, cups, etc.

 

Silicone Trivets
Pictured: An 8-inch diameter silicon trivet that has been trimmed to 5 inches. The cutaway ring can be used under mixing bowls, etc., to prevent slippage.

Bonus

Your personal assistant – Alexa, Cortana, Siri, etc. Ask your personal assistant to set a timer for you, read a recipe, or suggest substitute ingredients.

Personal Assistant
Pictured: An iPhone. Siri ha set the timer and it is displayed.

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Links of products and information related to the above blog post.  Note that the links showing items for purchase are for information only and are not specifically endorsed.

 

Talk to me.  I would love to hear from you!

     –  Renee

 

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It’s About Time

Three wristwatches areshown: a talking watch, a iPod Nano no longer being sold, and a new smart watch. Each watch faces appears different. The three watches display different times.
Pictured: Three watches are shown. Top: a smart watch, unknown manufacturer; Middle: An iPod Nano with elastic band crafted as wrist band; and bottom: a man’s talking watch with stretch metal band by Tel Time.

Years ago, my mother bought a cuckoo clock for her home.  She hung it on the wall in her living room and every hour the cuckoo called out the time. One loud cuckoo at 1 o’clock, 3 loud cuckoos at 3 o’clock, and so on.  And if that were not enough, it bellowed another cuckoo to mark every quarter hour, as well.  At 4 A.M. everyone knew the time because you could not sleep through it.

Well, I am not a fan of clocks that announce the time.  I think a cuckoo clock is a novelty, and as such, it should be heard once, maybe twice, in a lifetime and that is enough.  I feel the same way about talking watches.  Remember the crowing rooster watches marketed for the blind?

Talking watches got smarter.  Most no longer crow but actually announce the time.  “The time is 5:17,” the robotic voice declares. I do not want everyone in the movie theater to know I am getting impatient for the movie to end. I do not want a busload of people to know I have just checked the time.  I do not even want that time announcement to talk over the sound of the TV I am watching.  I do not like talking, crowing, or cuckooing clocks!

I want a watch I can wear on my wrist that tells me the time when I look at it.  I like the clock face to be big with bold hands and high contrast.  I do not need to see the numbers – I know where they are.  Just give me one indicator at the 12 o’clock position and everything else is relative; no clutter needed!

I have an old iPod Nano that I used for a timepiece for many years.  It came with a bunch of clock faces for me to choose from.  It had a pedometer and a stopwatch. It even had a radio if I wanted to connect earbuds or headphones.  That little thing would even read a 500-page book to me, if I so chose.  I hung it on a chain around my neck for a long time and later crafted my own elastic band for it and wore it as a wristwatch.  I loved my iPod Nano – until the battery recently lost its oomph.

So I decided to try out a smart watch.  They can be quite pricey, so I started at the low end, the very low end.  I bought one from amazon for $22.

The smart watch does a lot.  It has one clock face (no choice), and it has a pedometer.  I can add a SIM card and pretend to be Dick Tracy talking through my wrist for phone calls and texts.  It accepts a memory card so I can snap pictures from my wrist. It even sounds an alarm if the watch thinks  I have been sitting too long and need to get up and move about.  It does even more, more than I care to give much thought to.  Notably, however, the band is peculiar, to put it nicely.  It takes quite a bit of manipulation and gymnastics to get it around my wrist and locked in place, although I do not feel that it is ever securely fitted in place.  Removing it is a dance of its own.  The watch is fairly heavy for my small wrist and so when at rest, my wrist is turned to the side.

For $22, this smart watch is truly amazing.  Change the band and add a few faces to choose from and I am in! Until then, it is time to keep looking.