Hearing Mojo Logo
After my own hearing loss...
about us contact archives home





NEW PRODUCTS

PRODUCT REVIEWS

INDUSTRY NEWS

PEOPLE



HEARING AIDS

ASSISTIVE LISTENING SYSTEMS

AMPLIFIED PHONES

BLUETOOTH DEVICES

COCHLEAR IMPLANTS

TECHNOLOGY



COPING

ISSUES & ADVOCACY

CAPTIONING



RESOURCES






Links:

About.com: Deafness/Hard of Hearing

American Speech-Language- Hearing Association

Association of Late-Deafened Adults

Audiology Online

Auris Repletus - Dr. Tom Goyne

Beethoven's Ears

Bionic Ear Blog

Cochbla: Josh Swiller

Deafness and Hearing Aids

Deaf Read

Deafness Research Foundation

The Ear Foundation

Hard-of-Hearing Advocates

Healthy Hearing

Hear-it.org

HearingExchange

Hearing Informed

Hearing Loss Association of America

Hearing Loss Web

MedGadget.com

MenieresBlog

Meniere's Disease Information Center

Michael Chorost

Neil Bauman

Somewhat Silent

Stone Deaf Pilots - The Deaf Tech Blog

Agilent Makes It Easy To Design Hearing-Aid Compatible Cell Phones

Agilent Mobile Phone Design SystemNow there's no excuse. Agilent Technologies has come up with a design system enabling manufacturers of mobile phones to easily ensure their handsets meet all the hearing-aid-compatibility (HAC) standards mandated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). The news release and associated product material on the new Antenna Modeling Design System (AMDS) are worth looking at because they give a tutorial on electro-magnetic radition and the shielding technology required to assure your hearing aids are actually able to hear the sounds coming out of your cell phone. "By February 2008, all wireless carriers in the U.S. must ensure that 50 percent of their phones are hearing-aid compatible," says Agilent Product Marketing Manager Erwin De Baetselier. "Today, we are leading the industry by offering HAC compatibility tests in our EM simulation environment, ensuring that designers of wireless devices will be able to meet these important and rigorous specifications." I've written before about the foot-dragging by mobile phone manfacturers unwilling to put the extra effort into designing hearing-aid-compatible phones, and it's good to see a leading supplier of components and design services taking the FCC mandate seriously.



Comments

All this FCC mandate the cell phone manufactures to have 50% compatible phones is great. I hope they don't make them all M1 or T1 just to be labeled as hearing aid compatible. I think, least in my view, the volume dB should be listed as some phone are loud and not loud. Some have low ratings to very or super low ratings. These phones are useless to me but do know they are phone with real voulme. A mandate volume control 16 to 20 dB should be implemented by FCC. I think is resonable but I know that will never happen.

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)