Hi, I've also owned a couple of psr arrangers, and planning to get an s910 when money allows; they are by far great keyboards for arranging, performing, and for having some plane fun! I do agree that they are very blind friendly; specially the top end of the psr series and their navigation system, they place 10 items on screen, and the letters a through j let you choose which item you want. 8 buttons on the bottom let you switch pages or activate functions, and the bottom 8 perform another different 8 functions. The direct access button is great for accessing functions quickly, and the 8 registrations usually found on them are awesome; they let you recall all keyboard settings to a certain setup by the press of a button. HTH, D!J!X! _____ From: ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ddots-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mark Dew Sent: Monday, July 09, 2012 8:22 PM To: ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [ddots-l] Re: Question about keyboard If your interested in an arranger type keyboard, the Yamaha psr-s910 is an excellent choice. Or you might consider the little brother psr-s710. About a $500 difference. In my opinion, the psr series of keyboards are the most blind friendly. Through the years, I've owned the psr-2000 psr-3000 and the Tyros3. At present, I have the Tyros4, which I use at work along with the Yamaha cp300 piano. I also, have the Yamaha cvp409. At the present time, Yamaha doesn't make a keyboard that is a touch screen like Roland and Korg and I hope that stays that way. I used to be a Roland fan until the touch screen came to town. I am a Fantom X7 owner and I guess, it will be the last Roland for me. There are some great youtube videos on the psr-s910 you might check out. Good luck in your search and let us know what you end up with. Mark My WEBSITE http://www.markdew.com ----- Original Message ----- From: Mario <mailto:mariomarkovina@xxxxxxxxx> Markovina To: dancing dots <mailto:ddots-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, July 09, 2012 4:20 PM Subject: [ddots-l] Question about keyboard Hi list, I am in search for a keyboard for a live performances, and for recording purposes, unfortunately, I can not aford for a Motif X f. Does any of you know are the keyboards from Prs series accessible for the blind people, does any of you maybe uses Yamaha's Prs keyboard? Best regards Mario