Yeah, the batttery does run out quickly on the iPhone. I love my iPhone.

Thanks for your explanation, though.

Take care,

Brenda

mailto:meadowlar...@cox.net
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mary Otten" <motte...@gmail.com>
To: "OS X & iOS Accessibility" <mac-access@mac-access.net>
Sent: Thursday, November 14, 2013 7:24 PM
Subject: Re: advantage of an iPad over an iPhone?


I also have no vision, but I'm glad I have an iPad, and am planning to get a 
mini. I use my i-devices for so much, that I would not want to depend on 
just the one phone. There's  audible, Kindle iBooks. And those are just the 
reading things. There is Twitter, email, and some wordprocessing. In fact, I 
would be interested in knowing more about the accessible version of quick 
office for iPad. This is the first I've heard of that.
In some cases, apps will look and perform differently on the two devices. 
For instance, with websites, on the iPad, you get the regular website. On 
the phone, you get the mobile site. Some apps are laid out differently. For 
example, there is the settings app. On the iPad, you have everything down 
the left for categories, and on the right as a category gets focused, you 
have all the choices. So you don't have to move back and forward between so 
many screens. Occasionally, an app will be more accessible on one platform 
or the other. For example, the site app had been perfectly accessible on the 
iPad, while on the phone it was not. Sadly this is no longer the case.
If you like things like Netflix, the sound on the iPad being stereo, is 
better than it is on the phone. I myself find that app difficult to use, so 
I don't go there. But others do. But the biggest reason is simply that I 
don't think I could do a day on an iPhone if I had to just use that device. 
The battery would run out too soon.

Sent from my iPhone

On Nov 14, 2013, at 4:16 PM, "David Griffith" <d.griff...@btinternet.com> 
wrote:

> As far as I can see there are no compelling reasons for a blind user to
> require an iPad in addition to an iPhone, apart from possible better 
> battery
> life.
> The physical size of the iPad makes the onscreen keyboard larger but a 
> cheap
> external Bluetooth keyboard   on an iPhone will give a better keyboard
> experience anyway.
>
> If however, you have some useful vision then the situation is completely
> different and there are of course lots of advantages in having a bigger
> display area to look at. As I am not in that category nobody has ever been
> able to explain to me what advantage an iPad would have over an iPhone. At
> the margins there is apparently a version of Quick Office on the iPad 
> which
> is accessible on that platform whilst it remains inaccessible on the 
> iPhone.
> However Pages will meet most word processing  needs and I do not routinely
> use Spreadsheets on a mobile device.
>
> So in essence the case for a blind user investing in an iPad in addition 
> to
> a phone seem very tenuous to me.
>
> David Griffith
>
> David Griffith
>
>
> .
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: mac-access-boun...@mac-access.net
> [mailto:mac-access-boun...@mac-access.net] On Behalf Of meadowlark77
> Sent: 14 November 2013 23:40
> To: Mac OSX & iOS Accessibility
> Subject: advantage of an iPad over an iPhone?
>
> Just curious. What could be the advantage, say, of an iPad mini overthe
> iPhone 5? I'm asking for a reason. I told somebody theother day that I use
> my iPhone like a computer, more than I do a phone. I told them i E-Mail,
> write files and so on and so on and so on. I take pictures, videos and so
> on. Their reply was, "you really need an iPad, so you don't have to use 
> your
>
> phone like that." But do I? If I do, why? What are the differences between
> the iPad and the iPhone 5?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Brenda
>
> mailto:meadowlar...@cox.net
>
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