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onehandle Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 04:02 PM
Original message
99 year-old loves her first computer -- an iPad
Edited on Thu Apr-22-10 04:08 PM by onehandle
 
Run time: 01:52
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndkIP7ec3O8
 
Posted on YouTube: April 07, 2010
By YouTube Member: sackr
Views on YouTube: 46816
 
Posted on DU: April 22, 2010
By DU Member: onehandle
Views on DU: 473
 
I think that easy to use devices like the iPad could get a lot of older people to stop staring at Fox News all day and night and back into the world.

(not that the Internet is the whole world, but it certainly encourages much more positive interaction than Glenn Beck does)
______________

Video of 99-year-old Lake Oswego woman with iPad goes viral

“She’s writing all of her poetry on her iPad now,” Adelsheim said. “Her handwriting is so scratchy. It’s so much easier because she can actually read it. Others can read it, too.

Campbell actually wrote a tribute in appreciation of her newfound freedom from the frailties of old age.

To this technology-ninny it’s clear
In my compromised 100th year,
That to read and to write
Are again within sight
Of this Apple iPad pioneer.

“She’s so into it,” Adelsheim said. “She shows it to everybody. People come to her apartment and she entertains the masses by showing them how to use the iPad.”

http://www.oregonlive.com/lake-oswego/index.ssf/2010/04/video_of_99-year-old_lake_oswego_woman_with_ipad_goes_viral.html

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no_hypocrisy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 04:06 PM
Response to Original message
1. Way cool!
:yourock:
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SomeGuyInEagan Donating Member (872 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 04:15 PM
Response to Original message
2. Saw one last week - very surprised at how "readable" a book is on these ...
... nice resolution, bright display, vivid colors. We also tested high motion video from ABC via wifi and it really is stunning.

The screen gets "greased" up easily and I have a couple of other qualms, but for the first version of this product I was more impressed than I expected to be (I am generally impressed with Apple products but wondered about their decision to exclude multi-tasking, Flash support (I understand why), an on-board web cam, a USB port).
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proud patriot Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 04:49 PM
Response to Original message
3. this video made my day
:)
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frazzled Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 05:00 PM
Response to Original message
4. I was thinking we should get one for my 93-year-old father ...
My parents have never had a computer, and when I've suggested it before, my siblings have said they'd never "get" it and would be frustrated when something went wrong. They're both very intelligent and sharp-minded, though sometimes leery of technology. My father has just never been able to get the "mouse" thing when we tried to show him how to use the computer a number of years ago. And because he suffers from gout, his fingers are often badly swollen, and typing is hard.

They are always asking me to "look stuff up" for them on my computer. They're always giddy with amazement that I can find the information for them in mere seconds. My mother always goes to the library to look things up and read magazines (usually business stuff).

My first thought when I saw the i-Pad was that it would be excellent for seniors. They don't need to multitask. If they could just receive email pictures of their grandkids and great grandkids and learn how to "google" the information they're interested in, it would be so good for them. And I think the finger-hand motion is much easier for a senior than a mouse.

I'm going to get back on my siblings to consider going in on one for the next birthday or father's day.
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emulatorloo Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 05:43 PM
Response to Original message
5. Nice! Did you see this article last week?
Edited on Thu Apr-22-10 05:47 PM by emulatorloo
http://blogs.forbes.com/booked/2010/04/12/apples-ipad-brings-easy-reading-to-the-blind/

Apple's iPad Brings Easy Reading to the Blind
April 12, 2010 - 3:14 pm

===

Ask any PC-loving computer nerd why Apple products have become the de facto choice of the masses, and you’ll likely hear something like, “People buy Apple products because they’re pretty.” That may be true for many, but one group of consumers who care little for Apple’s prodigious aesthetics are the blind.

They care more about how Apple products actually work. And while the iPad may be Apple's most controversial launch in recent memory, the blind community is unanimous in its support. The National Federation of the Blind (NFB) even released a statement last January praising the device.

What are they so excited about?

<SNIP comparing the unfriendlyness of Kindle to the sight impaired, and iPad features that make it accessible >

NFB has commended Apple for producing a device that is usable right out of the box for both seeing and the visually impaired alike. The NFB statement even mentions that the touch-screen “need not be a barrier” to the blind.

Computer nerds, tech columnists and the general public may not know where the iPad fits into the existing media consumption landscape--but the blind and visually impaired see it as the only e-reader worth owning. Call it further proof that Apple is more than just a pretty face.


ON EDIT: This one is pretty interesting too


http://www.macdailynews.com/index.php/weblog/comments/24822/

Totally blind person reviews Apple iPad: 100% accessible straight out of the box; thanks, Apple!
Thursday, April 15, 2010 - 04:16 PM EDT


"The Apple iPad is one of the hottest pieces of technology on the market right now," Waldorf PC reports for Associated Content. "Just about everyone is talking about how hot the iPad looks and how they must have one."

" blind folks are no exception. Because Apple has done a spectacular job at integrating accessibility in all of their products in an effort to include the blind and other disabled individuals, blind people can enjoy being a part of these hot trends and feel cool like our sighted peers," Waldorf PC reports. "This enables us to have something to relate to when it comes to conversing with our sighted counterparts, which to me is huge because I do not enjoy the feeling that I'm so isolated and can only relate to a certain subculture. Thanks so much to Apple; we are not left out in the cold, being forced to wait a long period of time to have some cool gadgets in our hands long after the coolness has died out. And thanks so much to Apple caring enough about our inclusion; I'm able to provide a first person iPad review from a blindness perspective."

"The Apple iPad is one hundred percent accessible straight out of the box... Blind individuals can glide a finger over the screen, and as they glide their fingers, the options will be spoken aloud. When the users hear an option that they want to select, they can tap their fingers on that option twice, and the option will then be selected. There is no barrier to us blind folks using the Apple iPad's touch screen," Waldorf PC reports. "Of course, with me being totally blind, I'm going to give a lot of attention to detail in , as the sense of touch is very important to me. And if things feel nice, then I'm more inclined to pay better attention and be more interested. The iPad feels sleek, smooth, and thin, and I love that a lot.

Waldorf PC reports, "Apple has really changed the lives of many blind individuals by integrating accessibility in all things. I strongly feel that the rest of the electronic industry needs to follow in their footsteps, so blind individuals can continue to enjoy equal usability at an equal price. Because Apple has taken this major step in including us, I'm able to sit and chill out with all of my sighted peers, use my iPad right along with them, and join other blind techs in providing information to our fellow blind peers about the device. Best of all, I did not have to spend hundreds, or even thousands of dollars, to make the device accessible in order for me to use it."


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ShamelessHussy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Apr-22-10 07:31 PM
Response to Reply #5
6. thanks for sharing those links!
Edited on Thu Apr-22-10 07:31 PM by ShamelessHussy
:toast:

I am gonna pass them around my office, i have been working on them to embrace accessibility, and it has been hard to get them to see the benefits... these stories/video will definitely help in that regard.

:hi:
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