Hearing aid brands that are made specifically for the iphone

Posted by raykraemer @raykraemer, Jan 5, 2021

I was told by a major well known HA brand support person that the brand I am trying out is not made specifically for the iphone (IPHONE SE in this case), that my brand is more generic for all cell phones. I'm having problems with bluetooth connectivity constantly and it never goes away. I was told of two brands of HAs that are specifically made for iphone compatability, and they are Oticon and Starkey. Does anyone out there know anything about HA brands that are made specifically for compatability with the iphones?

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@joyces

Reply to Ken 82: We're a quarter mile from the edge of the continent...or, that really big antenna, the Pacific Ocean. However, our acreage and the acreage that abuts it on two sides (hundreds of acres total) is mostly old growth spruce, which is damned dense...and wonderful. Although we are so close to the ocean, we're in a small, steep-sided valley; house is at 55' above sea level. There's a Verizon cell tower a mile above us, with a high hill (about 500') between us. The next nearest tower is an AT&T 5 or 6 miles away, and we can get reception by hiking up on the back of our place and pointing the phone in that direction--not at all practical, as that's about a quarter mile away, through thick woods. Before we moved here full time, I kept a "cell phone trail" gouged out, but it was hard to write things down in pouring rain.<g> I've heard that the reason I can't get WiFi with my cell is due to the modem supplied by Charter; their cable provides phone, 'net, and TV (sorta) when there's electricity. There are far better modems available, but I've hesitated to invest in one, fearing that it would only add to the piles of electronic crap that doesn't work here, or work well enough. Believe it or not, here there's zero reception in CITY HALL, unless you have the pw for their WiFi. About half the places in town have zero reception. This is a concept that the techs in the Willamette Valley east of the Coast Range just fail to grasp. No point in asking about providers, as Charter is the only provider available to us (except CenturyLink for phone and 'net, no TV). All you need to do here is mention "Charter" and everyone has multiple stories about the lack of service. Right now, we're waiting for a repairman to rehang the cable, which was torn loose from the house when a tree limb fell across the cable a couple of weeks ago; fortunately, we still have some reception, but I can't drive up the driveway far enough to turn around (really long driveway that crosses a creek, which is flooded much of every winter). It had been three weeks since I'd been able to drive across the creek...and then the cable came down. I'm now parking where the cable crosses from a pole on our property to the house, where the cable hangs down almost to ground level. That does mean that I don't need to carry everything in from the road. Unfortunately, another storm is on the way, so, once the cable's rehung I still may not have use of the driveway.

All sounds glum, but where else would deer come and breathe on the window behind my monitor, begging for me to bring apple slices? Where else could I watch elk graze not 10' from my office window? There's the resident great blue heron, a male egret that's been thinking about living here, and the Canada geese have arrived to nest in the beaver pond between our place and the ocean. We have a great assortment of birds, from a bald eagle to lots of year-round hummingbirds. Every morning, Wiley the limping coyote trots down our one-lane road and then comes back, crosses the creek on the driveway culvert, and hunts pine squirrels in the reeds just past the acre I mow. We also occasionally have coastal black bear and cougar in the woods, as well as the pack of coyotes. The pine squirrels, packrats, and mice I could do without! Nearest neighbors are a quarter mile away, both west and east. Last week was about as cold as it ever gets here: clear, sunny, and down to the low 40s at night. A day over 75 in summer is "red hot." Perfect!

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You are so lucky to live among nature most days... Take good care ... sorry about Charter.. I have friends in STL who complain about the Charter service there... Flat city ... Corporate irresponsibility when they can get away with it..

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Several years ago, before we moved here full time, a mid-sized tree fell across our electric line. We weren't here. Pacific Power came out, cut the trunk and larger limbs into stove lengths and stacked them beside the driveway, hauled all the small stuff away. No extra charge.

When, after two hours of trying, I finally got through to Charter about the limb on our cable, the first thing they told me to do was to call a landscaper to remove the limb!!!! I told them to forget that, I'd move it myself (good firewood anyway). What a difference in service!

The annoyances of living in a fairly remote area (except for weekends and late summer when the "flatlanders" arrive by the tens of thousands) is more than offset by the wild creatures that visit here every day. Living here, you learn that waiting in line while the checker talks to a customer about her grandkids may slow things down, but it's just one sign of how friendly everyone is. When a forest fire (at the beach...unbelievable) struck almost five months ago, nearly everyone pitched in to help the nearly 300 who lost everything. As a result, people are working to clear their own lots of debris, and volunteers have appeared to take down huge dead trees, cut up metal debris, haul bags of ash and metal debris to the dump, reconnect water service, and provide temporary electric service. Less than three months after the fire, a few families were back living on their own land, albeit in travel trailers or campers. Recently, the first new modular homes have arrived. Some of us provide hot lunch every day for everyone working or volunteering...at one point, I was cooking for 100 every weekend day! You wouldn't find this kind of help from strangers in any city! Those of us who were evacuated but had homes to return to know that we were very fortunate, so the least we can do is pitch in wherever we can help.

Thanks to living in a home that I paid off nearly 60 years ago, I didn't need stimulus money last summer,,,or now. Several of us are giving back all the stimulus by feeding people or donating where it's most needed. Much more satisfying than buying something I really don't need!

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@joyces

Several years ago, before we moved here full time, a mid-sized tree fell across our electric line. We weren't here. Pacific Power came out, cut the trunk and larger limbs into stove lengths and stacked them beside the driveway, hauled all the small stuff away. No extra charge.

When, after two hours of trying, I finally got through to Charter about the limb on our cable, the first thing they told me to do was to call a landscaper to remove the limb!!!! I told them to forget that, I'd move it myself (good firewood anyway). What a difference in service!

The annoyances of living in a fairly remote area (except for weekends and late summer when the "flatlanders" arrive by the tens of thousands) is more than offset by the wild creatures that visit here every day. Living here, you learn that waiting in line while the checker talks to a customer about her grandkids may slow things down, but it's just one sign of how friendly everyone is. When a forest fire (at the beach...unbelievable) struck almost five months ago, nearly everyone pitched in to help the nearly 300 who lost everything. As a result, people are working to clear their own lots of debris, and volunteers have appeared to take down huge dead trees, cut up metal debris, haul bags of ash and metal debris to the dump, reconnect water service, and provide temporary electric service. Less than three months after the fire, a few families were back living on their own land, albeit in travel trailers or campers. Recently, the first new modular homes have arrived. Some of us provide hot lunch every day for everyone working or volunteering...at one point, I was cooking for 100 every weekend day! You wouldn't find this kind of help from strangers in any city! Those of us who were evacuated but had homes to return to know that we were very fortunate, so the least we can do is pitch in wherever we can help.

Thanks to living in a home that I paid off nearly 60 years ago, I didn't need stimulus money last summer,,,or now. Several of us are giving back all the stimulus by feeding people or donating where it's most needed. Much more satisfying than buying something I really don't need!

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@joyces You are indeed fortunate... I spent a memorable week a few years back at Depoe Bay.. watching the Whales spout and stir up the nearby bay.. One thing you might try is to get a better Modem ... than the one provided with a monthly charge by Charter.. Again like the motels in the area ... What kind do they use... ? .. When working in MA a few years back, Best Buy had one that really solved our problems out there on that remote edge.. Sorry I don't have the brand or type .. I recall that our Verizon signal for the Cell phone was next to ZIP at that time.. Ken

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@joyces

Several years ago, before we moved here full time, a mid-sized tree fell across our electric line. We weren't here. Pacific Power came out, cut the trunk and larger limbs into stove lengths and stacked them beside the driveway, hauled all the small stuff away. No extra charge.

When, after two hours of trying, I finally got through to Charter about the limb on our cable, the first thing they told me to do was to call a landscaper to remove the limb!!!! I told them to forget that, I'd move it myself (good firewood anyway). What a difference in service!

The annoyances of living in a fairly remote area (except for weekends and late summer when the "flatlanders" arrive by the tens of thousands) is more than offset by the wild creatures that visit here every day. Living here, you learn that waiting in line while the checker talks to a customer about her grandkids may slow things down, but it's just one sign of how friendly everyone is. When a forest fire (at the beach...unbelievable) struck almost five months ago, nearly everyone pitched in to help the nearly 300 who lost everything. As a result, people are working to clear their own lots of debris, and volunteers have appeared to take down huge dead trees, cut up metal debris, haul bags of ash and metal debris to the dump, reconnect water service, and provide temporary electric service. Less than three months after the fire, a few families were back living on their own land, albeit in travel trailers or campers. Recently, the first new modular homes have arrived. Some of us provide hot lunch every day for everyone working or volunteering...at one point, I was cooking for 100 every weekend day! You wouldn't find this kind of help from strangers in any city! Those of us who were evacuated but had homes to return to know that we were very fortunate, so the least we can do is pitch in wherever we can help.

Thanks to living in a home that I paid off nearly 60 years ago, I didn't need stimulus money last summer,,,or now. Several of us are giving back all the stimulus by feeding people or donating where it's most needed. Much more satisfying than buying something I really don't need!

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joyces@joyces I so enjoyed your description of life where you live including the having to wait in line while the customer before you is talking about her grandchildren to the person manning the register. Speaking as a New Yorker, I can say you'd be surprised at how New Yorkers have reached out to help strangers in ways similar to what you describe!

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@barbb

joyces@joyces I so enjoyed your description of life where you live including the having to wait in line while the customer before you is talking about her grandchildren to the person manning the register. Speaking as a New Yorker, I can say you'd be surprised at how New Yorkers have reached out to help strangers in ways similar to what you describe!

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Reply to BarbB: The amazing thing here is that many of the people helping/donating are pretty poor themselves. The woman who runs the largest fire relief place in town (at a church) works for minimum wage as a caregiver...but she has at times donated food for meals for dozens of people! This town is unusual in that a small portion of residents are wealthy retired folks who live in lovely homes, offset by all the minimum-wage tourism workers. There are very few middle-income jobs here. The town has 8,000 residents, but weekends and summer mean that there are over 50,000 people in town. As a result, every kid in our local school gets free breakfast and lunch; there are very few whose parents have a decent income. Dealing with Covid was a challenge...and then the fire burned nearly 300 homes, most of them very modest, north of town where property taxes are far, far lower. The areas that were burned were mostly heavily wooded with manufactured or very modest homes; it's like the fire skipped over the nicer homes (for the most part) and wiped out the people who had the least. Some are still living on Red Cross vouchers in a local motel; there's hope that FEMA trailers will come in soon to be set up in a planned subdivision that went bankrupt before homes were built. There are still displaced bears and cougars, but they're finally finding new homes away from the burned area. At times, there have been so many donations that the fire relief places have been overwhelmed. I'm continually amazed at how upbeat the atmosphere is among the people clearing their own lots: they've taken charge of their own destiny after having been dealt a very bad hand by fate. Nearly four months after the fire, many of them now have decided that they'll like their new home, whether manufactured or stick built, much better than what they had. They're over grieving all the things they lost and have risen to the challenge of starting over. A friend, who owned a mobile home park, was proud that she was providing decent housing for 31 families. Post fire, 29 of the mobile homes were rubble, and she lost her own home of over 50 years...but she's working to get permits to rebuild the mobile home park and has supported the two families whose homes weren't burned. At 79, she still hopes to be able to provide low-income housing; fortunately, she had excellent insurance on all the homes. A real trouper! She laughs because when she had to leave her home, she really thought it wouldn't burn. Her house was on a high heavily wooded hill; as she drove down the hill she remembered that she had set a bag of garbage out to take down to the trash can on the highway, so she turned around, retrieved the garbage, and placed it in the trash can so that the bears wouldn't get into it!

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