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Braille Characters


AMERIPHONE

Braille


Ameriphone JV35 Phone with 37-dB Amplification, Braille Characters and Talk Back (White) [C] [D] [-]
(Office Product) AMERIPHONE

Jumbo size buttons with Braille characters help you dial quickly and correctly
Extra loud (95+ dB) ringer, hearing aid compatible
Electronic voice repeats each number as it is dialed


Price: $95.99

Answers

How many possible braille characters are there?
huge bowl

Each character consists of a cell containing 6 positions that can have a raised dot or not have one. How many different Braille characters are possible?

if possible, use the permutation function.


Each position may be raised or not, so the number of possibilities is 2^6

Piezoelectric Braille system with PC parallel port control and HV transistors


Here's a project that makes use of these electronic Braille characters: www.metec-ag.de I built a bunch of transistor amplifiers and use two ...

How many dot patterns or characters in BRAILLE SYSTEM for visually challenged people?



I don't think so, no.

Why do drive-in bank atms have braille characters on them?



OMG! Never saw it that way! (No pun intended.....lol). The machines and the key pads are pre-manufactured like so. It's an industry standard.

how many characters does the braille alphebet have?



26, just like ours.

Braille & a new board game?

I am the inventor of a great new board game that will be even better after braille is added to the plastic molded pieces.

I need three made-up braille characters... and the game is called "the first Medieval board game", so they should look Medieval (whatever that means).

What three characters do you suggest?
The major cause of blindness is diabetes, I thought you knew that.


how about 'not diabetic', 'pre-diabetic' and 'diabetic', in order to make this question even remotely relevant to the 'diabetes' topic?


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  • [duxuser] Re: Preserve braille characters in text document ...

    : Fri, 12 Mar 2010 05:36:47 -0700 Still on my endless quest... urgh. I did try the option of using the [q~w] coding, which when entered into duxbury itself worked great, and translated fantastic. However, trying to import that coding from word didn't work so hot. One of my examples was: a schwa with the right hook ligature is going to be [q~5:r] So if I am reading the documentation correctly, in my word document I should code that [[*q~5:r*]], is that correct? Or have I misunderstood? I don't know how much of my problem with getting this to work was a coding problem and how much might be attributable to font problems (an unrecognized font in the input file, as opposed to, say, times new...

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