Well built Macintosh applications should support scripting. AppleScript is a core service of the OS and I and other VoiceOVer users and developer were asking for AppleScript support from the very start of VoiceOver and well before the NFB ever heard of VoiceOver.
All Mac application should support AppleScript as a rule and in fact if you build your application in XCode and Interface Builder now they do. The addition of AppleScript support was and is just bringing VoiceOver up to the standards that all Mac applications should strive for. Not having it was an omission on the part of Apple and one that I as a developer am glad that they corrected. Would that every developer would do the same for their applications. Gregory Kearney Manager - Accessible Media Association for the Blind of Western Australia 61 Kitchener Avenue, PO Box 101 Victoria Park 6979, WA Australia Telephone: +61 (08) 9311 8202 Telephone: +1 (307) 224-4022 (North America) Fax: +61 (08) 9361 8696 Toll free: 1800 658 388 (Australia only) Email: gkear...@gmail.com On 07/09/2009, at 8:52 PM, Jes Smith wrote: > > Hi all. > > I am greatly concerned that voice over now has support for scripting. > Especially now that you can make voice over launch an application with > a single script. I'm not talking about glancing at the time or seeing > how many unread messages you have in mail. I'm talking about opening > up apps like mail or Safari from within Voice OVer. I am concerned > that voice over is starting to become a bit like Jaws, and that if we > don't get a grip on it now, voice over will become Jaws for Macintosh. > I, like Mike Arrigo, don't feel that launching apps is something that > should be implemented in a screen reader. Also, I fear that the use of > apple scripts will replace the responsibility of an application > developer to make their application accessible right out of the box. > On the Windows side, if something isn't accessible with Jaws, you just > download scripts for it. What if you go to another person's computer > and they don't have the scripts for the app you are trying to use? > It's my belief that a certain article from the NFB prompted this > scripting support. Folks, the thing I like about voice over is that it > gives the blind user the same conceptual layout and information as it > appears on the screen to a sighted user. No other screen reader does > this, and we should keep voice over as a screen reader, and let it be. > If we don't, eventually, when we try and contact an Apple developer, > they will either ignore us, or will say, "Well, just download the > scripts for my application and you will have access." > Any thoughts? If someone disagrees with me, I'd love to hear your > arguments, not so that I can persuade you to agree with me, but so > that I can have a new perspective. > > Jes > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---