Capacitive surfaces work differently than resistive ones in multiple ways in addition to the conductivity needs.
To learn about how to make adaptations to headsticks and such for accessing capacitive surfaces, check out www.Rjcooper.com . Also, the folks who make the pogo stylus are really responsive. Also, here is one more, a tutorial from the AAC-RERC http://www.google.com/m/url?client=safari&ei=sQ9wTKiVOqTcM-KQoBM&hl=en&oe=UTF-8&q=http://aac-rerc.psu.edu/documents/headpointer_iphone.pdf&ved=0CBAQFjAA&usg=AFQjCNFKAOVxjGMuDolAxebfz2X0J0KcIQ Regards, Samuel Sennott Phd Candidate, The Pennsylvania State University www.alltogetherwecan.com Sent from my iPhone On Aug 21, 2010, at 7:08 AM, [email protected] wrote: > It is not true that capacitive input is impossible for people with prosetics. > There where two long conversations about that, here and on the wiki(maybe). > I could try to find them if you want, but I didn't catch it on 5 minutes of > Googling. I think the solution had something to do with attaching metal to > the end of the prosthetic. The results where that it is possible but doesn't > work very well... > This message cannot be displayed because of the way it is formatted. Ask the > sender to send it again using a different format or email program. > multipart/mixed > _______________________________________________ > accessibility mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/accessibility _______________________________________________ accessibility mailing list [email protected] http://lists.laptop.org/listinfo/accessibility
