A technician is setting up a Windows mobile device for a user who had trouble reading text on a previous device, especially at night.
Which of the following adjustments would be MOST appropriate?
A technician is setting up a Windows mobile device for a user who had trouble reading text on a previous device, especially at night.
Which of the following adjustments would be MOST appropriate?
The most appropriate adjustment for a user who has trouble reading text, especially at night, would be to utilize text-to-speech. This eliminates the need to strain their eyes regardless of the lighting conditions. Using a magnifier or increasing resolution may not resolve issues related to poor visibility in low light, and haptic feedback does not address the reading difficulty directly.
A magnifier isn't going to make it easier to see in the dark. That like giving a blind person glasses
Not true. It says they have trouble reading, not that they cannot read. A magnifier will help and will allow the phone to be quiet at night.
D - text-to-speech device -- The question says "trouble reading text on a previous device, especially at night" - If the user has trouble seeing at night, the magnifier (Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Ease of Access Center\Start Magnifier) probably won't help much - it will just make certain areas of the screen bigger not brighter. Increasing the resolution would help make words more distinct and sharp but not brighter. But a text-to-speech device would completely eliminate the problem since the user will need not read at all.
But wouldn't you have to see the settings in order to utilize text to speech in the first place? Especially at night? The way I see it, no proper explanation was given by anyone as to why using a magnifier would be the most appropriate.
I was first convinced that the answer was just text to speech, because they were specific in saying a windows "Mobile" device. But after exploring further, I see that the answer must be use the Magnifier. (app) - and you should too. On windows 10, press windows key and +, the windows magnifier app will load. examine the options that you can choose from. Text to speech is immediately available, (Control Alt Left click = read from here) then under the settings icon, you can click the link to "Make everything on my screen bigger" which change the Scaling Options for text on screen. The button for selecting "High Contrast Screen" is also readily available on the left.
I only reason i can think it isnt Text-to-Speech is it might be disruptive to others trying to sleep at night.
you could always use headphone
For a moment I thought Answer is D but I checked Windows 10 on settings you have Ease of Access and the option of Magnifier which can be set to increase font size. Therefore option A will be right choice.
To add to the confusion, you have a Narrator feature too in W10.
windows magnifier is including text-to-speech feature
Answer has to be D, because, person is having difficulty looking at the screen.
It doesn't say they are having trouble looking at the screen. It says they are having trouble reading, specifically.
Hey all, not really sure why a magnifier should here the best solution. A magnifier will cost extra money and is not really ergonomic. Text to speech would be a better choice in my opinion. What do you think? Thanks and regards
I had this question in my exam and selected the magnifier, but it would be interesting which domain you think this will be? I'm not sure about 1.3 or 1.4 or any other?
It's not a physical magnifier..
exactly
Wow, I hope to God you did not sit for the test. Like throwing money out the window.
The magnifier tool in windows mobile devices can enlarge text and other items on the screen making it easier for the user to read. u can enable night mode or adjust the brightness settings.
D serait plus approprié. s'il a des difficultés serait til pas plus facile d'activé la synthès vocale qui s'en chargera. puisqu'on ne sait pas vraiement le problème est dû à quoi.. rappellez vous, comptia utilise les moyens plus faciles.. si le visuel n'est pas bon, passons donc par l'audition.
A for sure
it is the user who has got the problem especially when doing reading at night. The appropriate answer would be the magnifier. Now with the previous device the challenge was that, it did not have this feature, but with the current windows device it comes with it. the question did'nt specify the previous device as it has done with the current one, that is why the answer, it is so obvious.
"especially at night" = not only at night. Magnifier must be the answer.
If your screen is dark and you zoom in it’s still dark…. Text to speech fixes this much better IMO
The question does not say or imply anything about brightness.