The base of a refreshable braille display often integrates a pure braille keyboard. Similar to the
Perkins Brailler, the input is performed by two sets of four keys on each side, while output is via a refreshable braille display consisting of a row of electro-mechanical
character cells, each of which can raise or lower a combination of eight round-tipped pins. Other variants exist that use a conventional
QWERTY keyboard for input and braille pins for output, as well as input-only and output-only devices. The mechanism which raises the dots uses the
piezo effect of some crystals, whereby they expand when a voltage is applied to them. Such a crystal is connected to a lever, which in turn raises the dot. There has to be a crystal for each dot of the display (
i.e., eight per character). Because of the complexity of producing a reliable display that will cope with daily wear and tear, these displays are expensive. Usually, only 40 or 80
braille cells are displayed. Models with between 18 and 40 cells exist in some notetaker devices. On some models the position of the
cursor is represented by vibrating the dots, and some models have a switch associated with each cell to move the cursor to that cell directly. ==Software==