Hi Lisa-
I agree with you that clients put too much expectation into
the
SGD.
The one area that I would disagree with you, though, is in
the
area of email…
Email may not be officially recognized as
“speech generation”, by
Medicare, but for many of our clients, it is one of their most important
forms
of communication. I do agree with you that it’s not the
SLPs job to address
the entertainment aspects of the device, but I do feel that email is
communication.
(The client who I was working with primarily wanted to do
email.
I think there should be enough RAM on the device in order to run eye
gaze AND
email.)
Margaret Cotts
From:
xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Lisa L
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 9:26 AM
To: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: FW: using SGDs vs modifying
computers
I have to jump in with another opinion.
I think that some of our patients put entirely too much
expectation on a SGD to be the one and only go to for communication,
entertainment, fiscal/home management and the like...
I personally do not feel that insurance should be paying
for
a system that has enough RAM to run every aspect of their daily
life.
Now, if the family wants to upgrade the RAM to be able
to do
all of these other add-on features, then I am all for the family having
that
option.
I can say that I am sick of having to go out and provide
tech support on a system that was crashed or infected with a virus that
then
enabled the communication aspect to fail. I don't think it was so bad
to
have systems that were dedicated for communication. I am a speech
pathologist... working to replace the impaired communication system... not
to
provide an all in one communication, entertainment and personal computer in
one
system, I am not the IT tech support person.
On Wed, Feb 10, 2010 at 12:14 PM, Edward Hitchcock
<xxxxxx@xxxxxxx>
wrote:
Glad to hear your Hulu is going well. Can I come
over
and watch Lost
tonight with you? :-)
Definitely agree that the RAM could be bucked up on general principles,
it tends to help almost any computer.
As a by the way, Jennifer, the RAM should be upgraded on any of the
eyemax devices (to 1GB total). I am almost certain that Dynavox
will
not let them (Eyemax units) be issued without the RAM upgrade, but may
be a good thing to check just in case. Actually, I think all Vmax
have
1 GB now, but again, I might just check it.
Ed Hitchcock OT/L
Technology Center
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
[mailto:xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Margaret Cotts
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 10:38 AM
To: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: using SGDs vs modifying computers
I wanted to amend part of what I wrote yesterday...
I do think that for clients who have an access method other than eye
gaze,
it's safer to use to use a conventional computer for browsing the
internet,
watching TV online, etc.
However, people who are using eye gaze as an access method don't have
that
option.
---------------
I have worked with a couple of people who seemed to have problems on
their
eye gaze system because there just wasn't enough RAM memory. (For
example,
one person couldn't use the eye gaze and have anti-virus software
running at
the same time.)
--------------
My suggestion-
Why don't we (as a group) write a joint letter to the vendor(s),
detailing
some of the problems we have had? (I'm thinking in particular of the
problems with eye gaze systems and RAM memory.) I think a mass letter,
signed by multiple SLPs/AT Specialists might have more weight than
individual complaints. (Maybe we could ask people from the ASHA AAC
SIG
to
contribute also?)
Maybe we could specifically ask for more RAM memory on the eye gaze
systems?
I could be wrong, but that seems to be the source of some of the
problems.
Just my two cents,
Margaret Cotts
P.S. Ed, I have a laptop with lots of RAM memory, and I watch Hulu and
streaming videos all the time, pretty much every day without
problems...
-----Original Message-----
From: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Edward Hitchcock
Sent: Wednesday, February 10, 2010 8:03 AM
To: xxxxxx@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: using SGDs vs modifying computers
But I do think that clients have to be realistic that these devices may
not be able to do it all. On the other hand, I occasionally try
streaming live TV or even Hulu on my own home computer, which is not
absolutely top of the line, but not as slow as a DynaVox either, and
the
experience of it is spotty at best. So some of this is that the
technology is not there yet in any case.
Ed Hitchcock OT/L
Technology Center
Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago
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