Microsoft Copilot link to the whole answer: Microsoft Copilot: Your AI companion - despite the dumb conversion by the Discourse software, it’s a link to a specific query
Microsoft Copilot explanation of why Medicare does not cover dental care: Microsoft Copilot: Your AI companion, again, the link has a specific, detailed explanation.
When you’re writing a post, click the upload button indicated by the red arrow in the attached screen capture. The upload process should be pretty self-obvious, especially if you’re using a computer as opposed to a smartphone.
I’ll add that the new M&RIE (3rd mic) now added to my Jabra Enhance 20s allows me to hear (in my car) the dashboard “warning chirps” that my lights are still on or my keys are in the ignition (I drive an older car!–this stuff is not automatic). I like being able to hear all the necessary sounds. And it improves safety!! For years I have not heard these important signals.
Sorry, I do not see this attach menu option? I’m using apple iPad Air and the upper menu options did not include this attachment option? Provide please w/ instructions how to do that using iOS operation system, thanks
The upload icon should be right in front of your eyes on iOS. Here’s a screen capture from my iPhone. Look in the lower right below the dialog entry box (rectangle).
Advanced M$RIE receiver works with its all benefits only for hearing loss audiogram without very steep slop toward severe loss. Second, one can get all the benefits if he/she has enough large open ear canal since M&RIE is more bulky than the standard receivers to be comfortably insert further inside.
In this blog there is attached one photo of M&RIE receiver insert not well in the canal, sticking out enough which shows rather not good fit. Unfortunately I was unable to attached my M&RIE photo which shows a good fit of this receivers as demo.
Third M&RIE receivers are not described really well in detail in order the users to understand how in different environments to get a max positive effect. Find below Resound trainer input about these advanced receivers and turning on their program what can give you in more details:
The M&RIE receivers work in different ways in the programs he has. They are active in program 1 and 3, with program 3 being exclusively M&RIE – while program 1 will use all the microphones on the hearing aid when appropriate.
In program 1 (All-Around) the hearing aid microphones go through these directional patterns depending on the listening environment. More complexity in the environment means a higher likelihood of using the directional modes. For your case, OMNI also means M&RIE mic. For the middle states, where one is M&RIE and one is top-mic directional, several things contribute to the hearing aid’s decision of which ear plays which role. In general, the better ear tends to be the directional ear (left in your case). But if the sound environment is very different left versus right – that also contributes to which ear goes directional. For instance if all the noise was on the left and the person of interest on the right, likely Right would go directional.
Changing the volume of the hearing aid does not change the directional mode, most likely the left ear switching to directional when watching a TV program has to do with the complexity of speech and noise / sound effects/ etc.
Program 2 (hear in noise) is a narrow directional program – using the top microphone to create a narrow beam. “who you are looking at is who you want to hear”. M&RIE is not a part of this program.
New Program 3 (outdoor) will never switch to the top microphones. This is a program that ONLY uses the M&RIE mic down in the ear canal. It is called outdoors because outdoor environments are typically the use case where we don’t want the hearing aids to go directional without the patient’s consent/choice. The benefits are natural wind noise reduction and localization – pinna effect. Recommendation is that this program can be used at home when watching the TV if you don’t like when your left device switches which microphone is dominant. This program is not recommended as a replacement to all day use, as it does not handle complex environments as intelligently as program
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Check I provided today with very detailed M&RIE tech description and setting from Resound trainer. It was very helpful to know that the audiologist office can remotely send a M&RIE setting in order to turn on this advanced receiver and take advantage of it especially in more wind noisy outdoor environment I use when biking.
Are m&rie aids good/better for musicians than ric aids? You can look at my audiogram to see if they might be appropriate. I’m completely satisfied with my BAHA for everyday living. I’m curious as to whether m&ric would be better for live music and for playing my classical guitar. My Osia baha is not good at all for playing music. Great at everything else!
I don’t know about the music part, but M&RIE receivers are standard RIC hearing aids with two microphones on each body and an ADDITIONAL third microphone on the outside of the receiver. The outside end is ideally placed just at the ear canal opening, where the pinna of the ear would normally focus environmental sounds.
Yep. It’s that additional microphone that has me intrigued. And wondering.
Musicians are a very small sub-set of HA users. As such, there may not be as many studies done around their concerns.
p.s. I’ve long heard the widex are excellent for musicians, perhaps because they are ‘simpler’ in their design–that is, don’t add a lot features for everyday wearing. This sounds like what I want! Maybe an older mdel…the Sheer or the Dream?
I can TOTALLY relate. My take? The wires simply CAN. NOT. BE. RESHAPED. I don’t care what kind of old wives tale is out there, I’ve tried everything: heating with a hair dryer, bending around other objects, curling them like a ribbon. Nothing changes the shape of the pre-curved ear wire. They are some kind of “memory wire” which I’ve also used in making jewelry.
I still have a shot of Trader Gary’s picture perfect ear wires that I’ve shown to a couple audis. The closest “fit” I have come by is mere length. My previous audi fitted me with LONG wires, perhaps thinking I’d be able to push the speakers deeper into my ear for better seal? But just like anything and everything ever put into my ears (custom molds made of hard plastic, acrylic, firm silicone or the current double-domes of flexible silicone) the speakers work their way out of my ear canal with normal articulation of talking, chewing, facial expressions, etc. Those long ear wires poked out of my ears like a weird coat hanger. I was always catching them on combs or fingers or something. I even tried turning the aids completely 360 degrees to take up the excess wire, then shoving them into my ears. The minute I let go, they just WHIRLED like a crazy top and flew right out of my ears!
Finally, my current audi swapped the L with a shorter ear wire (not sure if they come in L, M and S?). These wires fit the curve of my ear pretty good (not perfect), but of course the speakers work their way out of my ears all day long, so I just press them right back in.
Try a different length of ear wire - that’s pretty much all you can do. The technology simply isn’t there yet for laser-imaged ear shape to enable “custom” wire lengths. We can get custom ear molds but not custom wire length to fit the shape of our face and ear.