Guest guest Posted June 28, 2004 Report Share Posted June 28, 2004 For anyone on the list who uses the CapTel phone, can you explain how it differs from using a TTY with relay? How exactly does it work and do you see any way the CapTel phone can be made accessible to someone who is deafblind? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 28, 2004 Report Share Posted June 28, 2004 Hi , I use the CapTel phone. You asked a very good question about the CapTel phone being accessible to deaf/blind. From my knowledge at this point right now, I have not seen any changes made in the Federal Relay Service's in order for the CapTel phone to work for people who are deaf and blind. CapTel has a display on the phone itself that shows the text of what is spoken by the other calling party. I have not seen it being compatible for telebraille. Although, I could see it maybe being made available in the future for people who are deaf and blind if there was the same type of relay service (telebraille)option with just using one phone instead of two phone devices. This is how the CapTel phone works and also what qualifications you must have in order to use this new phone. The CapTel phone looks and works like an amplified telephone with one important addition - everything your " called party " says is displayed in text, word-for-word, while you are listening to the speaker (if applicable) and need only one analog phone line. CapTel is not a TTY, but a telephone with built-in captions, designed to let you have a more natural interactive conversation. Just dial the number of the person you are calling and listen while reading the text of everything they say. A Captionist, using the latest voice recognition technology for virtually real-time transcriptions of your call, generates the captions. The people who would benefit the most from using CapTel are: 1. Anyone with some degree of hearing loss, who is finding it more difficult to understand telephone conversations 2. People using hearing aids, cochlear implants or assistive listening devices 3. People who are deaf or hard of hearing and voice for themselves The Captel phone is a very new teltcommunication option and still in only available in some states. They have just recently released the OK in giving out only 50 CapTel phones a month to qualified persons. So, this is hoping that they can down the line find it to be accessible to deaf/blind voice users. Hope that helps your questions and also you may find out more information or how to address for the deaf/blind to benefit from this type of phone also. http://www.captionedtelephone.com/ Robin > For anyone on the list who uses the CapTel phone, can you explain how it > differs from using a TTY with relay? How exactly does it work and do you see > any way the CapTel phone can be made accessible to someone who is deafblind? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 30, 2004 Report Share Posted June 30, 2004 Does anyone know how much the captel phones cost? Where do you get them? Are they covered by insurance? I know I would love one! Taryn " Ms. Smiley " <MsSmiley12002@...> wrote:Hi , I use the CapTel phone. You asked a very good question about the CapTel phone being accessible to deaf/blind. From my knowledge at this point right now, I have not seen any changes made in the Federal Relay Service's in order for the CapTel phone to work for people who are deaf and blind. CapTel has a display on the phone itself that shows the text of what is spoken by the other calling party. I have not seen it being compatible for telebraille. Although, I could see it maybe being made available in the future for people who are deaf and blind if there was the same type of relay service (telebraille)option with just using one phone instead of two phone devices. This is how the CapTel phone works and also what qualifications you must have in order to use this new phone. The CapTel phone looks and works like an amplified telephone with one important addition - everything your " called party " says is displayed in text, word-for-word, while you are listening to the speaker (if applicable) and need only one analog phone line. CapTel is not a TTY, but a telephone with built-in captions, designed to let you have a more natural interactive conversation. Just dial the number of the person you are calling and listen while reading the text of everything they say. A Captionist, using the latest voice recognition technology for virtually real-time transcriptions of your call, generates the captions. The people who would benefit the most from using CapTel are: 1. Anyone with some degree of hearing loss, who is finding it more difficult to understand telephone conversations 2. People using hearing aids, cochlear implants or assistive listening devices 3. People who are deaf or hard of hearing and voice for themselves The Captel phone is a very new teltcommunication option and still in only available in some states. They have just recently released the OK in giving out only 50 CapTel phones a month to qualified persons. So, this is hoping that they can down the line find it to be accessible to deaf/blind voice users. Hope that helps your questions and also you may find out more information or how to address for the deaf/blind to benefit from this type of phone also. http://www.captionedtelephone.com/ Robin > For anyone on the list who uses the CapTel phone, can you explain how it > differs from using a TTY with relay? How exactly does it work and do you see > any way the CapTel phone can be made accessible to someone who is deafblind? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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