[fb-exchange] Re: Cork Saturday 20th. Jan. 2024

  • From: Adrian <hello@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: fb-exchange@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 20 Jan 2024 21:55:07 +0000

Thanks for the minutes Cearbhall and apologise for missing the club again.

Cheers,
Adrian

On 2024-01-20 21:34, Cearbhall O'Meadhra wrote:

Attendance: 11

We have had a week of deeply cold weather in which Sligo was the worst off with black ice and snow making it dangerous to walk with a guide dog. However, the dogs loved the snow and rolled happily about in it to the consternation of their owners. Washing hoses suffered with frozen spray guns and blocked tubes! Needless to say, there were many suggestions as to how best to manage hoses and sprays in freezing weather, which will, no doubt, improve matters for all.

Dominique arrived with a new laptop running Windows 11. She ran the web-based version of Microsoft 365 and found that she was not happy with it. With the help of VI-labs, she reinstalled Office 219 to bring her back to more familiar tools. She was disturbed to find that Zoom and Teams were no longer configured as before and the meeting supplied advice on how to set up these programs for ease of use in the future.

Jackie had a Sadd story to relate of her experience with Navi lens. She had built up a library of codes for her entire DVD collection and was experimenting with other uses of Navi lens when the program died without explanation. She established that it was still working by scanning a cereal box and receiving the usual range of information from it. Desperately, she uninstalled Navi lens and reinstalled it to see if that would improve matters. The result was that all her library of carefully created codes disappeared off her device. She rescanned a box of cereal and that worked because Kellogg's QR codes are public.

Now, all of the dB d's have to be rescanned and new codes created.

Chris had a positive experience with the original version of Microsoft Soundscape. It still works fine to call out his markers and features in the local landscape even though the app is no longer supported by Microsoft. Cearbhall recommended that he try the Scottish version of Soundscape to have the same experience but in a supported environment in case anything went wrong in the future. Others found that the Soundscape Community version also works very well. Jackie advised that Blind Square also gives the relevant details that are delivered by Soundscape.

Ken reminded us that Apple officially announced its next big product. The Apple Vision Pro. This is a mixed-reality headset, and is the first mainstream headset with a dedicated screen reader built in. Vision Pro is a mixed-reality headset. It's shaped like a bulky pair of swimming goggles and has screens and lenses on the inside. When you wear Vision Pro you see the real world through these screens, with a virtual overlay on top. You can control vision pro in three ways. With your eyes, with your hands, and with your voice. For those who are fully sighted, simply look at an object, pinch your fingers, and it's activated. Sounds simple. For those with low vision, it's going to be different though.

The Vision Pro has Voiceover built in. When Voiceover is on, you control it by pinching different fingers together.

Follow  this link for the full article on this important development:

https://vi.ie/apple-vision-pro-unleashing-untapped-potential-for-accessibility/

Anne Marie tried the apple pencil to draw music notation and handwriting. With the aid of her available vision, she is able to use the pen to good effect.

Here is a full description of various ways in which the Apple pencil can do the job:

https://support.apple.com/en-ie/HT211774

Stuart, Jackie and Ken were up to no good with Be My AI and Seeing AI. They found that Be My AI gave more information than Seeing AI. Ken gave a demonstration of Be My AI reading the contents of a photo from his own records. Seeing AI did not give nearly as good a description.

Nothing daunted, the intrepid trio went on to get Be my AI to write a song on the basis of a fantastic dream story that Ken concocted. Stuart used Suno.ai https://www.suno.ai/

to create theme music for the song which Be My AI put together. The result was a rich, tuneful, catchy song complete with chorus and incidental melodies. Song contests beware!

Ger offered a hilarious video of an Australian TV program that explored the difference between SIRI and Google AI. Ken shared the podcast of the program and brought the house down with the performance of the two systems. Google AI won hands down on detail, accuracy and delivery. SIRI was more inclined to announce that the answer had been found on the internet with an invitation to read it on screen. Google usually gave a full spoken answer to the questions straight away.

have a listen at: https://youtu.be/j_53zWLVv4I?si=ElaTRSAWLPz-yUJz

The meeting ended.

All the best,

Cearbhall

m +353 (0)833323487 e: cearbhall.omeadhra@xxxxxxx

Other related posts: