At the age of 68 I ordered my first IPhone the 4 and never looked back. I was living in a small town and had absolutely no one with any knowledge or experience with a device like this. But I used the internet and just my normal stubbornness to stick with it and learn to use it. Just goes to prove that you can teach an old dog new tricks. I currently own an IPhone 6 and a 6S as well as an Android device. I use them every single day and don’t know how I could do without them. And as mentioned, the fact that you can buy the same device as all your sighted friends and family and make it work for you is a very satisfying experience. Marie
From: Gerardo Corripio Sent: Thursday, May 4, 2017 6:11 AM To: viphone@googlegroups.com Subject: Re: 10 ways the iPhone changed everything Thursday, July 12, 2012 is the day that an iPhone changed my life forever: I remember being very excited when 3 weeks prior, I was given an iPhone I think it was a 4S, to test-drive, and wow amazing! I remember the joy in being able to open apps, check the battery status and other tasks during the nearly 30-minutes with the test iPhone; probably due to having listened to blindness podcasts over the years of how the iPhone works with VO, thus my Dad for himself saw the benefits of debuting an iPhone! So looking around for sales, Iusacell, nowadays it's AT&T Mexico, offered a good low-price plan on an iPhone 3GS so to Iusacell we went! By maybe an hour later, I remember the feeling, as some of you'll have described previously, of being able to buy something normal, instead of a blindness-specific product. And ever since then, I'm still with an iPhone and loving it! I do almost everything on it (EMail, browsing the Internet). El 04/05/2017 a las 08:03 a.m., Esther Levegnale escribió: Hi, Everyone! The iPhone has certainly made a huge difference in my life. My Apple experience started back on February 6, 2012, when I walked into the Apple Store at the West Farms Mall in West Hartford, CT, and bought an iPod Touch. Because I had a very bad experience with a touch-screen device before then that was meant for blind people, I decided to buy an iPod first in order for me to reacquaint myself with a touch screen. Well, let me tell you. It didn't take me long to get used to the iPod Touch. I was emailing the day after I bought the device, and then the following November I took the plunge and bought the iPhone 5. The rest is history. I do almost everything on my phone and I absolutely love it. It felt wonderful to walk into that Apple Store and buy the same thing that everyone else buys rather than spending money to buy only adaptive products for the blind. Believe me, I'm not knocking these blindness-related devices and, in fact, they are wonderful too, but it was so wonderful when I heard VoiceOver speak for the first time in the store when the salesperson activated it for me. Anyway, that's my story about my Apple experience. I also switched from a Dell computer over to an Apple MacBook Air. Take care everyone! Esther Levegnale Sent From Esther's Amazing and Awesome iPhone 7+! On May 4, 2017, at 8:38 AM, Bill Gallik <wfgal...@icloud.com> wrote: In 2007 I purchased a Trekker/Maestro for $2,000 among other assistive technology devices (i.e., Note Reader II, etc.). At that time I composed an e-mail to one of the various blindness-oriented e-mail lists suggesting how nice it would be if a single device could support all the various aspects of assistive technology. Little did I know that such a device was being initially released by Apple - the iPhone. I wished I had that $2000 and waited for what coming; it is truly amazing and definitely life changing! **************** - Bill - "Confutatis maledictis, flammis acribus addictis." - Translation: to "The damned and accursed are consigned to the flames of hell." - Mozart's Requiem, "Confutatis Maledictis" On May 3, 2017, at 1:28 AM, M. Taylor <mk...@ucla.edu> wrote: CNET: 10 ways the iPhone changed everything Ten years ago, Nokia was the world's largest phone maker. Microsoft was gearing up to launch Windows Vista. And the best new products at CES included a wireless TV and an MP3 player that streamed internet radio. Then, on Jan. 9, 2007, Apple CEO Steve Jobs unveiled a device that went on to change the world -- a $499 iPhone that came with 4GB of storage. It was a mobile phone, a music player and an Internet device. "iPhone is a revolutionary and magical product that is literally five years ahead of any other mobile phone," Jobs said at the time. Since then, Apple has sold more than 1.2 billion iPhones and has become the most profitable public company in the world. Copycat phones from companies like Samsung, HTC, Motorola and Xiaomi proliferated across the globe, and now even people in places without steady electricity have smartphones. "It's difficult to understate [the iPhone's] impact," Reticle Research analyst Ross Rubin said. "The ripples it has created affect wide swaths of our lives." Here are some ways the iPhone has changed the way we live: 1. We're always on It used to be you'd fire up your computer, wait for your Wi-Fi to connect (or your dialup connection, if we're going wayyy back) and open Internet Explorer, Safari or some other web browser. Now you're connected to the internet all the time. If you're not on Wi-Fi, you're linked through your cellular network. It's not just inescapable connectivity that the iPhone helped bring about. It's also how we actually access the internet. The iPhone made mobile web browsing useful for the first time. Every other mobile web browser before that was painful, in the words of CNET's Kent German. Soon came a flood of apps, which removed the need to open a web browser at all. 2. Tablets, watches and headphones, oh my Multiple devices are either tied to the iPhone or exist because the phone was created. There's the iPad, essentially a larger iPhone you use at home. And there's the Apple Watch, which is tethered to the iPhone. Then there are all the accessories spurred by the popularity of the iPhone, like phone cases; Bluetooth speakers and headphones; and charging docks. ABI Research estimates that revenue in the global mobile accessories market will top $110 billion in 2021. "Given users' attachment to their smartphones and their wants and needs to personalize and protect them, the aftermarket mobile accessories market is showing no signs of slowing down," ABI analyst Marina Lu said. 3. The key to happiness You may not remember this now, but Apple's first iPhone didn't have such a thing as third-party apps or the App Store. That changed in July 2008, when Apple introduced the iPhone 3G and its iPhone 2.0 software. The App Store is what made the iPhone a must-have device. There are now more than 2 million apps in the App Store, with essentially every company making one or more apps. And the iPhone and App Store have spawned industries that couldn't exist without smartphones. There'd be no Uber or Lyft to shuttle us from place to place, for instance, or Instagram or Snapchat for sharing our photos. 4. Everyone's a shutterbug Sure, we had cameras on our phones before the iPhone. But the Apple gadget's combination of easy internet access and apps like Instagram inspired people's inner photographer. As a result, lugging around an actual camera became redundant. "We as a species take more pictures than we ever had in the past by an order of magnitude," Current Analysis analyst Avi Greengart said. 5. Livin' live The phone's camera also means you have a portable camcorder (remember those?) at your fingertips. And on top of that, the phone's connection lets you broadcast video immediately. That could mean talking to your family members on the other side of the country or shooting a cat video for YouTube. Or, thanks to services like Facebook Live or Periscope, the technology can be used for filming police brutality or instantly reporting something you've seen. On the flip side, having these smart devices on us at all times lets law enforcement and corporations (like the makers of those apps on your phone) track us. Apple has taken a strong stance on privacy, but security remains a big concern for users. 6. Putting the digits in digital Touchscreens once were rare. Now babies are swiping at TVs and wondering why the screen doesn't change. Interactive screens are in virtually everything, even refrigerators. When Jobs introduced the iPhone, he said, "We are all born with the ultimate pointing device -- our fingers -- and iPhone uses them to create the most revolutionary user interface since the mouse." He was more right than he could imagine. The appeal of a touchscreen phone forced Microsoft to embrace touch in its software and get its hardware partners to make touchscreen phones, tablets and computers. It's almost surprising to see a device today without a touchscreen (though Apple maintains it won't be putting touchscreens in its Mac computers). 7. You are here The introduction of mapping on the iPhone meant you no longer had to feel like an embarrassed tourist in a new city, clutching a giant paper map on the street corner. Google Maps and Apple Maps are two of the most-used apps on the iPhone, and they've steadily added features over the years, like public transit directions. The first iPhone had only 4GB of storage. 8. Gaming goes to the next level The iPhone reinvented the idea of mobile gaming. Apps like Angry Birds, that anyone could play using their fingers on the touchscreen, became hugely popular, and payment models changed. Many games are now free to play -- instead of charging a sales price, developers came up with the idea of in-app purchases, which let you pay for new levels and features as you go. Seven of the top 10 grossing iPhone apps are games, like Pokemon Go, according to market tracker App Annie. 9. Cash ain't king Apple wasn't the first company to talk about mobile payments, but it did make even your grandma aware of the technology, which lets you use your phone to purchase things. Goodbye, cash. Hello, iPhone. The iPhone's Wallet app also can store retail coupons, reward cards, and passes for flights and movies, all in one place. Cash isn't dead yet -- there still are many places that don't take mobile payments -- but using your phone at the checkout stand is more common than ever. 10. But wait -- there's more There's no way to sum up all that the iPhone did in just 10 points. So here's a grab bag of additional stuff. Apple basically killed Adobe Flash on mobile devices and made endless scrolling a very good thing. You never have to carry a calculator or flashlight anymore, and visual voicemail lets you easily skip forward in a meandering message. Podcasts mean you don't have to listen to the radio in real time -- and they give you new options, such as the hit show "Serial." Social media has also shifted heavily to mobile devices from desktop computers, letting people feel connected to friends at all times. Facebook said that in its most recent quarter, roughly 84 percent of its $6.82 billion in ad revenue came from mobile ads. At the same time, the iPhone has been linked to the rise in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and short attention spans in kids. Governments use mobile devices to spy on their citizens, and consumers give up a lot of personal information in exchange for services like Uber rides. But even with the negatives, don't try to take someone's iPhone away. Original Article at: https://www.cnet.com/news/apple-iphone-ipad-q2-2017-earnings-revenue/ Mark -- The following information is important for all members of the V iPhone list. 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