Fw: Fw: More Info on New Accessible Cell Phone
David Poehlman
poehlman1 at comcast.net
Sun Dec 28 16:55:32 EST 2003
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kelly Pierce" <kellyjosef at EARTHLINK.NET>
To: <VICUG-L at MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU>
Sent: Sunday, December 28, 2003 4:38 PM
Subject: Fw: More Info on New Accessible Cell Phone
Dennis adds new details from a Sprint press release. He sent it to me
and obviously intended to share it with the list. The phone is now
available at retail stores and the full price is $330, which may be
offered for less as this is the only talking cell phone that Sprint
provides.
Kelly
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dennis Bartlett" <info at speechbraille.com>
To: "Kelly Pierce" <kellyjosef at EARTHLINK.NET>
Sent: Sunday, December 28, 2003 2:33 PM
Subject: RE: More Info on New Accessible Cell Phone
> Sprint, the US telecom operator, has announced the immediate
availability of
> its latest video phone, manufactured by
> Toshiba,
> through its chain of retail stores.
>
> The VM4050 offers rich imaging capabilities
> The VM4050 offers a built-in video and still camera, which can take and
send
> VGA images or 15-second clips. The 2.2-inch TFT main screen offers 310
x 350
> pixel resolution at 260K (18-bit) colours, while the camera offers 4x
> digital and 2x optical zoom, picture light and a self-timer function.
>
> The 1-inch external STN screen supports 16-bit colour and offers
picture
> caller ID so users can instantly tell who is calling without opening
the
> phone.
>
> Other features include a built-in speakerphone, voice control and voice
> guidance, which means the phone talks to users to inform them of
important
> events.
> PIM functionality is also included along with other basic applications
such
> as a calculator. The handset also contains an embedded GPS system for
> emergency
> location services.
>
> The phone's hardware is dual-band and tri-mode for operation outside of
the
> Sprint PCS network, while supported PCS Vision features include Picture
> Mail,
> Messaging, Games, Ringers, Screen Savers, Web and PCS Business
Connection.
>
> A lithium-ion battery gives the VM4050 a claimed life of 10 days
standby or
> over 3 hours of talk-time, while an extended battery offers an extra
50%
> life.
>
> Sprint are suggesting a retail price of $329.99 USD at its retail
stores.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: VICUG-L: Visually Impaired Computer Users' Group List
> [mailto:VICUG-L at MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU]On Behalf Of Kelly Pierce
> Sent: Sunday, December 28, 2003 10:14 AM
> To: VICUG-L at MAELSTROM.STJOHNS.EDU
> Subject: More Info on New Accessible Cell Phone
>
>
> Hello all,
>
> In the last hour, I reached Bonnie O'Day who shared some information
> about the new accessible cell phone. As many know, Bonnie filed a
> discrimination complaint about cell phone accessibility against cell
> phone producer Audiovox and service provider Verizon Wireless. last
> week, Audiovox settled the complaint by offering a cell phone that
> provides voice guidance to enable blind users to place and receive
voice
> calls. The complaint is still pending against Verizon who has not
> decided to offer the new phone. Verizon is America's largest wireless
> communications company with 38 million subscribers. It had $1.8
billion
> in profits in the third quarter of 2003.
>
> The telephone is currently offered by Sprint as the VM4050 by Toshiba.
> It has the following audio features:
>
> *Voice announce of On/off
> *Voice announce of Roaming out of local area
> *Voice identifying battery status by percentage
> *Voice confirmation of outgoing telephone number to be dialed
> *Talking caller ID of incoming calls
> *Voice announcement that voice mails are waiting when phone is turned
on.
>
> Bonnie thanked the American Foundation for the Blind who hired as a
> consultant a highly knowledgeable telecommunications expert that
provided
> invaluable technical assistance in working with the companies to
develop
> this solution. It is unclear if this telephone is available at
> storefront Sprint locations or just through catalog orders. In either
> event, the audio functionality is built right into the phone. There is
> no special software to install and no blind version either! The
> mainstream product itself is accessible for basic functionality.
>
> Kelly
>
>
> VICUG-L is the Visually Impaired Computer User Group List.
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>
>
>
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