Archive for the ‘NLS DTB Player’ Category

Today’s Business: 2011-11-30

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

Today’s Activities

  • Shower. DONE.
  • Cat duty.  DONE.  Cat duty involves cleaning the litter boxes, bagging the excess, feeding, and house cleaning cat dirt of all types.

Log

08:30 AM: I’m up.

09:40 AM: Facebooked for several minutes. Friend count: 603 (unchanged). Fan count: 114 (unchanged).

02:15 PM: Watched today’s episode of   The Young and the Restless   via the DVR.

07:30 PM: Watched today’s episode of   Dr. Phil   via the DVR,   called   Desperately Seeking Attention.

07:50 PM: Watched tonight’s episode of   NBC’s Nightly News   via the DVR.

08:00 PM: I noticed that after unplugging the Explorer 8300 DVR in order to rearrange the cables behind my entertainment center, that the DVR “forgot” some of the scheduled future recordings I had programmed it last week to make.  This is likely not a problem unique to this particular machine, as I’ve observed this phenomenon in the last DVR I had.  So, I’ll just have to remember to check the upcoming events list after power to the DVR has been interrupted, and make sure it’s complete.  If it’s not, reprograming sets it to rights.

10:00 PM: Tagged, normalized, and added approximately 365 songs from this year to my music library from Promo Only.  I now have 1449 songs from 2011.  Though I do not DJ professionally anymore, I still love music and enjoy immensely, keeping my library up-to-date.  The total library song count is now 61992.

10:30 PM: [Emmy]  says that she successfully downloaded and extracted last night’s hockey game from my web site.  She has placed the .3gp audio file onto an NLS DTB cartridge, since it sounds better on the NLS DTB player than it does on the Stream.  The Player is louder and has a much fuller sound than the Stream in loud-speaker mode.

11:00 PM: Talked with   [Emmy].

11:10 PM: I’m heading to bed.  More tomorrow.

12:05 AM: The daily traffic stats from yesterday for my blogs.  The monthly keyword hit count for this run is 796, up from 791 at last check.  The record high for this dimension remains at 1788.  The next goal: 2000.

Tom Hesley

Received Mail and Shipments

None today.

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Copying DTBs To NLS Player Cartridges

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Questions: How do you burn to the NLS digital player blank cassettes?  How do you copy a new talking book onto a blank NLS cartridge? Answers follow.

The blank cartridges available for the digital talking book (DTB) players from the National Library Service for the Blind (NLS) are actually just USB thumb drives housed in bigger-than-typical cases.  I’ve purchased some 2GB units in February of 2010 for approximately $11 each.  Their larger size makes them easier to handle for people with arthritis and other ailments of the arms, hands, and fingers, and these easier-to-hold memory cards come equipped with a USB A-style male connector on the end opposite the finger hole. So, you can copy files to and from them just as you would a CompactFlash, SD, SD HD, or other external storage device.  However, you will need to obtain a male-to-female USB-A cable for this, which you must purchase separately.  Further, your computer must be USB2.0-ready to get the fastest data transfer rates.  This really speeds things along if you’re copying long NLS books.  So avoid using USB1.1 ports if possible.

When you connect these cassette-like memory cards to your Windows computer, you should hear the ba-blunk sound of a new USB device being recognized.  Then, some seconds later, a new drive letter will appear in your Windows Explorer folder list once the system installs the drivers for the card.  At this point, you can use copy-paste, drag-and-drop, the command prompt’s COPY or XCOPY commands, or any other valid Windows key stroke sequence to transfer files to and from the card.

You can store any files on the card you wish; they need not be NLS DTB files.  However, in this piece, I’m focusing on transferring the DAISY-formatted DTB book files from the National Library Service for the Blind, Recordings for the Blind, and other vendors.  So I’ll not discuss other file types further here.

To copy a DTB recording onto these flash-style memory cards, perform the following steps:

  1. First, download the book (as a ZIP file from the NLS BARD web site or other similar provider).  You’ll need to set up an account on the BARD site first through your nearest regional library for the blind.  But once you’ve received your account information, you can browse the library’s collection through your broadband Internet connection (recommended), and download any number of books to your computer as long as you have enough space on your hard drive for them.
  2. Once you’ve obtained a DTB book you’d like to read, connect a cartridge to your computer as discussed above.
  3. To minimize confusion, delete any files and folders that may be present on the card (say, from other books that you’ve listened to).
  4. Then, in Windows Explorer, find the ZIP file of the book you with to copy to the cartridge.
  5. Right-click that file, and a context menu will appear.
  6. On that menu, choose the  Extract All…  item.  This runs the extraction wizard.
  7. Click the  Next  button.  This brings up a window that allows you to choose the place to extract the DTB files in the original ZIP file to.
  8. Press the   Browse   button. The   Select a destination  window should pop up.
  9. In that window, navigate to the   My Computer   folder and open it.  Then, find and select the drive letter of the DTB cartridge you just connected above.  Press the  OK  button.  The  Select a destination  windows closes, and you’re taken back to the  Extraction Wizard  window, and you should observe the drive you chose appear in the   Files will be extracted to this directory   edit box.
  10. To begin the extraction to the card, press the   Next   button.  At this point, a progress bar appears, and the files in the ZIP file are decompressed and copied to your cartridge.  The time it takes to perform the extraction depends on the reading time of the book.  The longer the book, the bigger its files are, and the bigger the files, the longer the extraction will take.  Average-sized books extract anywhere from within five to fifteen seconds.
  11. Next, disconnect the card from your computer but first, it’s safest to use the   Safely Remove Hardware   wizard first to make sure that any open files on the card have been properly saved and closed before you unplug it.
  12. Insert the card into your NLS DTB player and power the player on.  After a short pause, the title of the book should be announced.  If so, then you’ve successfully copied a talking book to your card, and you can then read and navigate through it just as you would the already-populated cartridges you get from NLS.

Happy reading, and take care.

Tom Hesley

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Today’s Business: 2010-03-02

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

Today’s Activities

  • Shower.  DONE.
  • Schedule appointment for Mom with the retina specialists in Johnstown for sometime in April, 2010. 
  • Still fighting my   current cold.

 

Log

07:20 AM: I’m up. My weight is unchanged from yesterday.  It’s still  177.0 Lbs.    

10:00 AM: Watched today’s episode of    Pittsburgh Today Live   on KDKA TV.

11:45 AM: Went to the Carnegie Regional Library for the Blind, and borrowed five more digital books.  I love reading books on these new DTB players.   

12:00 PM: Read some of the book:  Team of Rivals.

12:30 PM: Watched KDKA TV local news at noon.

01:30 PM: Watched today’s episode of   The Young and the Restless.

02:45 PM: Walked   [Emmy]   to her doctors appointment after finishing an Indian lunch at Tamarind. 

03:30 PM: Created audio journal episode:   AJE-2010-03-02-14-47.  Talked through some tid bits of the trip so far.

04:00 PM: Walked   [Emmy]   home from her doctors appointment.  Now, it’s nap time.

06:10 PM: I’m back up again, and they just noted on the news that people who nap a lot appear to have a significantly greater chance of getting diabetes.  Hmmmm.  I wonder fi it’s the napping itself that causes the diabetes, or if napping is but another effect of some other cause, that also causes diabetes? 

07:00 PM: Watched tonight’s episode of   NBC’s Nightly News   evening news show.

08:00 PM: Rewrote titles for nearly fifty posts in the   Tom’s Love Quest   blog, to remove stop words from them. 

09:50 PM: Fixed twelve broken internal links in the    Tom’s Love Quest   blog.

09:55 PM: The Penguins just won against Buffalo, 3 to 2.  Now, I’m reading.

12:15 AM: [Tad] called.  We’re getting together sometime this week to conduct some business for the   WPSBC Alumni Association.  I’m to call him in the morning when I wake up and schedule the exact time to meet him, once he’s at work and has access to his calendar. 

12:20 AM: Bed time for me.  So good night, take care, and see you later. 

Tom Hesley

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NLS DTB Player

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

06:00 PM: I played with this new National Library Service (NLS) digital talking book (DTB) player. 

I got one from the Pittsburgh branch of National Library Service for the Blind.  They were very cordial and in just five minutes, I had one to take home and try.

The player is quite easy to learn; one can pick up the basics without picking up the manual.  Having never seen the machine before, I was able to begin playing the first of two books the library loaned me, in less than ten keystrokes. 

The two books I’ve played so far have great sound; no doubt owing to the high quality digital recordings made these days.  But the player itself has wonderfully clear audio as well; surprising that such a small unit could sound so good, and so loud. 

Plus, it seems to be constructed very well, from a very rugged and thick plastic.  The device should be able to handle short-distance falls onto carpeted floors without malfunction. 

Easy to find, the large, iconic-shaped buttons are a breeze to work.  These are both visually and tactilely stimulating (bright colors and easily identifiable shapes through touch). Each button also has braille letters beside it for those who wish to identify functionality by reading instead of by recognizing the different shapes of the keys.   All keys are found on the top of the unit.  The keys are as follows:

  • Tone: UP and DOWN
  • Info
  • Power ON / OFF
  • Previous, Next
  • Menu
  • Sleep
  • Rewind, Fast forward
  • Play
  • Speed
  • Mark
  • Volume: UP and DOWN

Ports for headphones and USB are positioned on the right, with the handle facing you. 

The cartridges easily insert into a slot on the front edge of the unit, and have a large finger-hole to facilitate removing them. They go in, braille side up.  Plus, all books that I’m aware of fit on a single cartridge, and you need not stop every ninety minutes to turn the cartridge over or switch tracks, like you would on a traditional cassette player. 

There are no moving parts in these new players; thus, no motors to wear out, no belts to break, and no pinch rollers to harden or become sticky.  So unlike the cassette players, these units require no periodic head and roller cleaning.  In fact, gone altogether is the audio playback head.  Instead, the new cartridges impart their digital audio data to the player through a USB port which is an integral part of the cartridge holder.  The elimination of the heads makes a thing of the past the muffled-sounding playback you got when your heads got dirty.  This will never happen with these new units.  As long as you keep the ports on both player and cartridge clean, you’ll always get the high-fidelity sound that so characterizes these new players.  Finally, since these state-of-the-art cartridges have no audio tape inside, this makes tape spillage and jamming in the player an artifact of a far less advanced time in talking book playback; a time that fortunately, we’ve evolved way beyond. 

I’ll miss the “speech chatter” that you used to get when fast-advancing or fast-reversing cassettes on those old GE four-track recorders and players of the 1980s when fast-forwarding or rewinding.  In this player now, there’s no need to bear all that battery-sapping noise in order to hear the chapter index tones.  This digital player and the books recorded for it come equipped with an index built in; you can instantly skip to the next or previous chapters, without waiding through all that rapid-fire chattery audio.   

The REWIND and FAST FORWARD buttons on this DTB player work like the corresponding buttons on a CD player.  When pressed and held down, they don’t actually speed up the audio.  Rather, they omit small fragments of it but play the remaining fragments at normal speed.   This has the effect of speeding up the playback, without the “chipmunk” sound of the cassette players of yester-year.  Further, unlike traditional REWIND and FAST FORWARD, the playback advances or digresses at faster rates.  The longer you hold down the button. The longer you hold down the button, the bigger the jumps the unit makes.  Initially, the skipping goes in five-second increments.  Then if you keep the button pressed down, it jumps to one-minute intervals, and you hear an announcement telling you how much time in the recording has been skipped.  Keep holding the button, and you get five and ten minute jumps. 

Readers may purchase blank 2GB cartridges for $12 (plus shipping) they mentioned at the library, and then download books from the NLS DTB website and put on these cards.  You can place as many books on a single cartridge the available space will allow.  a 2GB cartridge can hold approximately twenty NLS talking books.  With an appropriate cable, you can also connect a thumb drive or other USB storage device, to the USB port on the right side. 

It has a built-in rechargeable battery that lasts more than 29 hours playing time between charges (according to the audible battery level indicator).  Plus, the built-in power cord means that you don’t have to keep track of a separate charger cable. 

You get easily four times the listen time per charge, as compared with the previous generation table-top cassette talking book players.  Nice.  Further, they’ve eliminated the problem of overcharging the battery should you leave the player plugged in for too long a time.  This new unit contains state-of-the-art battery recharging technology, that monitors the level of charge in the battery, and decreases the charge current as the battery approaches the fully-charged condition to avoid overheating.  This means that you can leave the unit plugged in full-time without destroying its battery.  Big improvement!

The unit has no visual screen, and thus, speaks all the important functions with the Tom voice that Victor Reader Stream users are quite familiar with.  In fact, it makes similar sounds to the Stream; perhaps owing to the fact that the Stream as well as this player are both manufactured by the same company; Humanware. 

Yes, this player seems to have been well worth the wait.  I plan on reading more books on it this year to get a more definitive understanding of it’s operations and overall quality.  But initial indications are that it’s really quite good.

Tom Hesley

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