Description: Introductory music begins to play. As title page appears displaying Braille Note Basics, QT Model Overview, Online Video Training Modules, Alberta Education. Narrator: We’re now going to give you the difference between the BT and the QT. Aside from the Braille display being larger. Of course both models are available in 32 or 18. The features you will notice that are the same, in the top left hand corner again there is a small recessed hole which represents where the microphone is, speaker in the center. Other than that you will notice that the interface on this one is completely different. Starting along the top row you’ll have an escape key by number keys across the top. Backspace is now in the top right hand corner as if you were working on a computer and then you have your standard qwerty buttons. Enter is exactly where you’d find it on a standard 101 keyboard. Shift, control and spacebar will be familiar to you as well as the up and down arrows and left and right. The Braille Note has some other unique features to it such as the repeat button. On the Braille BT Model there is a command you’d have to enter in order for it to repeat. On the QT they have represented that with one complete key to itself. There is a function button which on the BT you’d again do a qwerty command. On the QT they’ve assigned a button to it all by itself as well as menu, help and read. This is very important when navigating a document and you want to listen to a sentence or a paragraph you’d press read along with one of the other commands on the keyboard and it would read the rest of the document for you. Both models do the same function whether you have a QT or a BT. If you are familiar with Braille and would prefer to input in the six keys of Braille on this keyboard when you open a document you can convert it to Braille and use S, D, F, J, K, L to simulate doing a Braille entry. Description: End of video.