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Electronic Aids to Daily Living
The following devices have discrete control interface (an electronic device is either turned ON or OFF), such as lights, fans, television ect.. Several devices are capable of continuous control interface which results in successively, greater or smaller degrees of control. For example, continuous control is: lowering and raising of the volume on a television, or dimming of a light. ![]() The Call Bell ![]() ![]() Relax II by TASH Controls up ![]() ![]() NEMO Basic Nemo has a Back-lit LCD display, readable at night or in dark settings. It transmits infrared signals in all directions, just like your TV's remote control. In fact, you might say it is a remote control. It will learn any infrared command from any other remote, and comes with built-in codes for X10 (lights), hospital beds, and a special high-quality speaker telephone (optional). Access NEMO by: voice, switch, joystick, and wheelchair controls. ![]() Quartet The SimplicityTM ![]() ![]() Sicare Pilot Natural speech recognition for controlling your environment. Sicare Pilot converts spoken commands into signals that control numerous devices ![]() ![]() Mercury and Mercury SE Included on every device are pre-programmed infrared signals for most brands of televisions, VCRs, DVD players, satellite and cable receivers. This eliminates the inconveniences associated with programming a device. Additionally, the X-10 command center allows users to turn on and off lights and household appliances (additional equipment required). Mercury is a fully integrated Microsoft® Windows® XP-based Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) device. Mercury SE is the dedicated version of the Mercury AAC device. Mercury SE has been altered to conform to the Medicare guidelines for coverage established for speech-generating devices (SGD). ![]() FreeSwitch Max The FreeSwitch Max activates AC appliances with direct selection using the keypad or external switches. The ![]() |
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