Hello everyone, this is Chenelle I wanted to know how do you change away file 
to an MP3 file? Via your iPhone 5s using your memo voice recording app? I am 
taking a class at the Hurtley school for the blind and I have to record my 
lessons and I have to send it via an MP3 file and I wanted to know how would 
you go about doing this using your iPhone 5s? Thank you so much you have a 
great Day

Sent from my iPhone

> On Aug 26, 2014, at 21:40, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> 
> [email protected]       Google Groups              
> Topic digest 
> View all topics
> blind square help. - 8 Updates
> Trouble downloading/deleting TV show from iTunes store - 1 Update
> Smart Mailboxes - 6 Updates
> smtp mail port settings in apple mail - 1 Update
> recording Skype calls - 3 Updates
> Good and accessible NAS anyone? - 1 Update
> Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper - 2 Updates
> accessible nas disc question - 1 Update
> insert key remapping not working on right side of the keyboard under Fusion 
> ... - 1 Update
> sharing activities? - 1 Update
> blind square help.           
> Feliciano G <[email protected]>: Aug 26 02:24PM -0700 
> 
> Once you have chosen a business or location, you should have the options 
> start tracking and plan a route. You want to select plan a route so that you 
> can use BlindSquare and the third-party application. If the third-party isn't 
> available on that view, you cannot use the app. Google Maps works great and 
> it is free.
>  
> Regards, Feliciano
>  
>  
>  
> Like my Facebook page: https://m.facebook.com/profile.php?id=690649294341327
> Follow me on Twitter: Www.twitter.com/theblindman12v
>  
>  
> Sent from the Super-iPhone
>  
> Eugenia Firth <[email protected]>: Aug 26 04:59PM -0500 
> 
> Hi there 
> Somebody may have already said this, but you can pair Blind Square with Apple 
> Maps as well, which is already on your iPhone. You need to decide whether you 
> want Blind Square to tell each street you come to. If you are riding in a 
> car, you may not want that. You can set this in Blind Square's settings 
> section. I forgot to set that once, and I was sorry. 
>  
> Gigi 
>  
> Jessica Moss <[email protected]>: Aug 26 06:57PM -0400 
> 
> I did select "plan a route," and the only ones that were listed were google 
> maps, and maps, which surprised me, considering the fact that the web site 
> says it works with multiple apps, so have no idea why those were the only 
> ones listed.
> Les Kriegler <[email protected]>: Aug 26 07:34PM -0400 
> 
> It will only recognize apps that are installed on your phone. Do you have 
> other GPS apps on your phone?
>  
> Sent from my iPhone
>  
> Jessica Moss <[email protected]>: Aug 26 08:19PM -0400 
> 
> I had scout maps installed on my phone, but it didn't pick that up, which I 
> found interesting.
> Jessica Moss <[email protected]>: Aug 26 08:36PM -0400 
> 
> Which one do you use? I eventually had to uninstall scout maps and go back to 
> google maps, which I had a love/hate relationship with, mostly because it 
> didn't let me know when I'd reached my destination, which was frustrating for 
> me.
> Les Kriegler <[email protected]>: Aug 26 09:05PM -0400 
> 
> I use Google maps and most situations, I preferred over Apple maps.
>  
> Sent from my iPhone
>  
> David Chittenden <[email protected]>: Aug 27 01:33PM +1200 
> 
> I prefer Apple Maps. 
>  
> David Chittenden, MSc, MRCAA
> Email: [email protected]
> Mobile: +64 21 2288 288
> Sent from my iPhone
>  
> Back to top
> Trouble downloading/deleting TV show from iTunes store           
> Christine Grassman <[email protected]>: Aug 26 09:08PM -0400 
> 
> OK, folks. I purchased season 1 of a television show from iTunes today on my 
> iPhone. I was only able to download single episodes. I attempted to download 
> the season onto my computer by going to my account on my MacBook, but it 
> claimed there were no undownloaded items.
> When I selected "TV shows" in iTunes, it shows the name of the show, but I 
> cannot get to individual episodes.
> Additionally, I cannot delete episodes I have watched already from "Videos" 
> on my iPhone; again, it is only showing the title of the show, but will not 
> allow me to edit by episode. (I can view individual episodes, but not edit.)
> What am I doing wrong? Thanks for any help.
> Christine
> Back to top
> Smart Mailboxes           
> Jonathan Mosen <[email protected]>: Aug 27 11:25AM +1200 
> 
> To answer the original poster's question, I have experienced a number of 
> annoyances in Mail under mavericks, but smart mailboxes are not one. For me 
> they are working as well as they always have.
> I like smart mailboxes a lot, and for business purposes they really help me 
> to keep track of different projects easily. For example, I have a smart 
> mailbox for each book and tutorial I have produced, where I keep purchase 
> records and confirmation emails. It makes it easy for me to see who has 
> purchased what, and if I need to, to contact everyone who purchased a product 
> at once. Very nifty.
> I don't think smart mailboxes are the best tool for putting messages from 
> lists into a specific folder though. As someone else already pointed out, if 
> you use a smart mailbox for this, the messages not only end up in the smart 
> mailbox, but they also stay in your Inbox. I used to use mail rules to move 
> email from specific lists into specific folders and that worked really well. 
> Now that I have an accessible iMap provider, I use server-side rules to do 
> this job, the advantage being that if I'm checking mail on an iThing, the 
> mail appears in the correct folder even if Mail on the Mac isn't running, 
> since the rules are server side.
> Jonathan Mosen
> Mosen Consulting
> Blindness technology eBooks, tutorials and training
> http://Mosen.org
>  
> Joe Quinn <[email protected]>: Aug 26 07:24PM -0500 
> 
> What do you use for your mail? I assume Gmail doesn't do this server-side 
> rules thing?
>  
> Sent from my iPhone
>  
> Alex Hall <[email protected]>: Aug 26 08:31PM -0400 
> 
> Gmail absolutely does do server-side rules. They're called filters, and you 
> can use them to sort messages just like Jonathan was saying.
>  
> --
> Have a great day,
> Alex Hall
> [email protected]
> Jonathan Mosen <[email protected]>: Aug 27 12:42PM +1200 
> 
> At the moment, I have all my domains hosted with DreamHost and am very happy 
> with them.
> iCloud will also do server side rules.
> Jonathan Mosen
> Mosen Consulting
> Blindness technology eBooks, tutorials and training
> http://Mosen.org
>  
> Jason White <[email protected]>: Aug 27 10:55AM +1000 
> 
> > At the moment, I have all my domains hosted with DreamHost and am very 
> > happy with them.
> > iCloud will also do server side rules.
>  
> I've been using Procmail for this for a very long time. One of its advantages
> is that you can run shell commands to process incoming mail messages,
> for example to invoke spam filters, trigger automatic replies, etc.
>  
> Procmail hasn't seen any development for a long time; apparently, Maildrop is
> a more modern replacement and at some point I should rewrite my rules to use
> it instead.
> Joshua Tubbs <[email protected]>: Aug 26 09:03PM -0400 
> 
> I’ll tell you one thing: I wish I could find a client that is more reliable. 
> When I set up my Droid tablet, for some reason suddenly Mail stopped 
> downloading Gmail messages, so I tried syncing accounts, reinstalling mail 
> again, etc.
> Anyone have any ideas?
> Back to top
> smtp mail port settings in apple mail           
> don bishop <[email protected]>: Aug 26 05:39PM -0700 
> 
> I have an account i'm trying to set up under apple mail. This provider 
> doesn't use ssl. I can receive mail just fine, but can't locate the port 
> number or optional login info for the smtp (outgoing) side of things. 
> Any help would be greatly appreciated on how to get to the smtp settings 
> using vo. I'm writing this on my braille sense mini until I get the smtp set 
> up correctly. 
>  
> Thanks,
> Don
> Back to top
> recording Skype calls           
> Jonathan Mosen <[email protected]>: Aug 27 11:47AM +1200 
> 
> Hi Jenine, if you are going to be doing this sort of thing for broadcast 
> purposes or for anything other than your own archival purposes, I'd highly 
> recommend using Audio Highjack pro to record your Skype calls.
> You can choose the file format you want to use. This is important, because 
> most file formats are lossy. If you save a Skype call in a lossy format, like 
> MP3 or something compressed, you will eventually have to bring it into a 
> sound editor, where it will get edited, saved, and eventually compressed a 
> second time to a lossy format. The more times you do this, the more artefacts 
> you'll introduce to your recording. You can tell Audio Highjack to save in 
> .aiff format, which is the Mac equivalent of a .wav file and is therefore 
> completely uncompressed.I know you also use Amadeus Pro, so let me talk you 
> through how I use the two together.
> I set up Audio Highjack so that my voice is on one channel, and the Skype 
> caller's voice is on the other. The advantage of doing this is that you can 
> then bring the file into Amadeus Pro, and put each channel in a separate 
> track. Once that's done, convert each track from a mono to a stereo track, 
> and you have you and the Skype caller in both ears.
> Because you are both on separate tracks, you can apply different effects as 
> appropriate. For example, normalise each track separately so you are both 
> sounding similar in volume. If the Skype caller sounds too bright or too 
> dull, you can apply equalisation just to the caller, and not to you.
> Finally, if you wish, you can pan each track to get a stereo effect. Then 
> when you're done getting things sounding just how you want, mix it all down 
> back onto one stereo track.
> It sounds a bit complicated writing it down, but i do this all the time and 
> now it's just a routine.
> The other advantage of Audio Highjack is that it isn't specific to Skype. I 
> use it to record FaceTime Audio calls and calls from more obscure chat 
> programmes where appropriate, so it's a very powerful tool that doesn't lock 
> you in.
> And finally, while I am not testing Yosemite, I would think Audio Hijack will 
> work with the new continuity features of iOS 8 and Yosemite. This means you 
> can make a call on your iPhone, and record it on your Mac with Audio Hijack. 
> If you have a carrier that offers HD Voice for instance, then you'll get 
> brilliant sound doing that.
> Hope that's of some help. Audio Hijack is one of the coolest things about a 
> Mac I reckon.
> Jonathan Mosen
> Mosen Consulting
> Blindness technology eBooks, tutorials and training
> http://Mosen.org
>  
> Jenine Stanley <[email protected]>: Aug 26 08:05PM -0400 
> 
> Thanks Jonathan. 
>  
> Actually what you describe doesn’t sound that tedious or complex and would be 
> quite cool if it works, which it obviously does. 
>  
> Do you need to use another program, Sound Flower I think, to also set this 
> whole thing up or is that only if you want to record your Mac’s audio as 
> well? No idea why I’d want to do that but just saying. :)
> Jenine Stanley
> [email protected]
>  
>  
>  
> Jonathan Mosen <[email protected]>: Aug 27 12:10PM +1200 
> 
> Hi Jenine, I have a mixer, so no need for SoundFlower therefore I have no 
> knowledge of it.
> However for recording calls, Audio Highjack is all you need.
> Jonathan Mosen
> Mosen Consulting
> Blindness technology eBooks, tutorials and training
> http://Mosen.org
>  
> Back to top
> Good and accessible NAS anyone?           
> Jonathan Mosen <[email protected]>: Aug 27 12:02PM +1200 
> 
> Hi Krister, if you have access to sighted assistance for the initial set-up, 
> I can recommend the Synology products highly. Their iOS apps are wonderful. 
> So for day to day use, it's really good. Administration is right now a 
> dreadful business, unless you don't mind the command line. I will paste below 
> a post from my blog at:
> http://mosen.org/index.php/my-new-synology-nas-great-product-nasty-accessibility/
> While I am constrained in what I can say, I will say that since this post was 
> published, I have had extremely productive dialogue with Synology and I am 
> confident the access issues are temporary.
> My new Synology NAS. Great product, NASty accessibility
> 30/05/2014 by Jonathan Mosen 
> A chance remark by a friend of mine a few weeks ago saw me embarking on quite 
> a journey. He asked me if I had one of the Synology NAS (network attached 
> storage) devices. When I indicated that not only did I not have one, but I 
> wasn’t familiar with that manufacturer, he launched into quite a soliloquy 
> about how incredible they were, and how having one was like having your own 
> Linux-based server in your house. My friend Gordon knows his tech, so I 
> decided to bring myself up to speed.
> Coincidentally, we had this conversation just as the idea of the Mosen 
> Channel was crystallising. I’ve kept a lot of my terrestrial and Internet 
> radio shows over the years, mainly so I can pass them on to subsequent 
> generations of my family. As I was going through the extensive archives, I 
> was reminded about a glaring flaw in my backup strategy. I take backing up 
> very seriously, but one area where my approach fell short was that there was 
> no off-site backup. If my main network drive failed, I have copies of my 
> irreplaceable data in other locations, but all those locations were in my 
> house. Having a backup elsewhere would guard against data loss in the case of 
> some sort of disaster. I’m not so concerned with music I could get again, but 
> it’s the personal mementos, not just radio stuff but home recordings of my 
> kids, that I really care about.
> When researching this question, I finally found a few back-up services that 
> would allow you to back up network attached storage to the cloud. Not many 
> do, and quite a few that do charge a premium for the feature. These services 
> varied widely in their accessibility, and I didn’t like having the 
> application running in the background all the time. Some of them impacted 
> quite markedly on system performance. They also demonstrated just how easy it 
> was for the NAS I was using, the Western Digital MyBook Live, to get bogged 
> down. The processor in it is on the old side now, and if a couple of Time 
> Machine backups and another cloud backup package were writing to the drive, 
> it was affecting data access.
> The Synology Disk Station products are powered by their own operating system, 
> Disk Station Manager (DSM for short). When I started to research the feature 
> set of DSM, I was delighted to learn that by installing a number of packages, 
> which effectively are apps for the OS, Synology Disk Stations can be backed 
> up to a number of cloud services, including Amazon Glacier. Glacier is an 
> extremely cheap form of mass-storage, designed for occasional retrieval, so 
> it’s ideal for making a cheap backup of last resort.
> I was impressed to read glowing reviews of Synology Disk Stations by almost 
> everybody. Many IT people I trust said Synology make the best NAS products on 
> the market, period.
> Looking at the wide range of models of Disk Station available, it reminded me 
> a bit of Nokia’s Symbian days. There are quite a few models with subtle 
> differences and models full of numbers and letters. Synology offers a handy 
> feature on their site where you can indicate what features are important to 
> you, and you get a narrowed down list of products based on your 
> specifications.
> Having done some reading, I placed my order for my first Synology product 
> last week, and promptly cancelled it. My usual rule of thumb is that after 
> researching a product range and determining what I’ll buy, I make the 
> purchase online, and busy myself reading the user guide and doing whatever 
> research I can until the product arrives.
> Right after placing the order, I stumbled upon a very helpful feature on the 
> Synology website. You can actually log in to one of their NAS devices, and 
> experience the user interface for yourself.
> To do this, visit http://demo.synology.com:5000. The username is admin, and 
> the password is synology. You’re then working in a real drive, with a few of 
> the functions disabled for security reasons.
> After logging in, I was confronted with what I can only nicely call the 
> significant accessibility challenges of the DSM user interface. With a bit of 
> JAWS cursor work and some judicious pressing of Enter on clickable elements, 
> quite a bit can be done. It seems to work far better in Firefox than it does 
> in IE. However, one of the most significant issues is that checkboxes and 
> radio buttons are non-standard, and do not appear to screen readers as the 
> controls they are. In practical terms, what this means is that you might go 
> into a screen where you have the option to enable a feature. The control 
> behaves like a checkbox, but a screen reader will see an unlabelled button. 
> You have no way of knowing if that option is checked or not, so a lot of 
> trial and error is involved. With a patient sighted person’s help, you can 
> get a lot more done by using the JAWS features allowing you to assign names 
> to buttons and elements on the web.
> When you access the device from Safari in iOS, you get a stripped down, 
> different interface, and in some ways it’s more friendly for completing some 
> tasks without help, using the VoiceOver screen reader built into iOS. So 
> that’s worth a shot.
> So, much as I liked the feature set of the Synology Disk Stations, I 
> cancelled my order to give myself a chance to rethink.
> When I googled the matter of the accessibility problems with the OS, I was 
> disappointed to read that Synology had been made well aware of the problems 
> screen reader users are having, but to date have done nothing about them. 
> This didn’t fill me with confidence.
> It is very hard to match the performance and feature set of the Synology 
> products, but I was able to try the web UI of a couple of other NAS products. 
> They really weren’t much better. The Twitter exchanges I’ve had on this topic 
> over the last couple of weeks would suggest there is a serious overall 
> problem with access to quality NAS products by screen reader users. For those 
> of us using products like this as I am, at home and for my small business, 
> it’s a bit of an inconvenience and work-arounds of a sort exist. More about 
> those in a moment. But the real concern for me is that for blind people who 
> are perfectly competent network administrators, it can create serious 
> problems when a company they work for deploys these products that are 
> inaccessible. It’s hard enough for blind people to get jobs as it is, without 
> these tough interfaces making it harder.
> After realising that I was unlikely to find anything that did what I wanted 
> that would be accessible, I went back and ordered another Synology product, 
> the DS214Play. This is a two-bay NAS, and I put a Western Digital Red 4TB 
> drive in both bays, running Raid for redundancy.
> I chose the 214Play because it has a good processor speed, ample RAM, and is 
> designed for multimedia work. I’ll talk more about some of the slick things 
> it can do when I look at the accessibility of the iOS apps, but here’s a 
> comprehensive review of the DS214Play.
> When setting up the NAS, I found the only viable option was to enlist the 
> help of one of my kids as a human screen reader. Notwithstanding the 
> inaccessibility, the set-up of the drives, the opening of appropriate ports 
> of your router for external services such as Telnet, SSH, FTP and more, and 
> the installing of various packages to expand the drive’s functionality is an 
> effortless and friendly experience if you can see the screen.
> The set-up process also takes you through obtaining a quick connect ID. This 
> makes it easy to connect your DiskStation via the free mobile apps, and is 
> particularly useful if you have a dynamic IP address. For services like FTP, 
> you can obtain a free dynamic DNS from Synology.
> You can even use this device to run your own mail server, Drupal, WordPress 
> and much more. I wonder if anyone has managed to get Icecast or Shoutcast 
> working on it?
> If you’re not afraid of getting your hands dirty with the command line, you 
> can get a human screen reader to enable Telnet and SSH for you. The drive can 
> then be controlled via the command line interface, which of course may not be 
> the friendliest thing out there but is 100% accessible.
> You can also create users and groups by carefully putting together a 
> tab-delimited text file in Notepad, and running it through the importer in 
> DSM. The Synology is a really good FTP server, so if you want to set up an 
> FTP server and add people, the text file is a good way to get that job done.
> Most people will want to migrate data from an old NAS or other storage device 
> to their new one, and there are a couple of ways of getting this done. You 
> can mount both the old and new volume on your computer and copy across that 
> way, but a faster way if you have sighted assistance is to use File Station, 
> a feature of DSM. File Station lets you mount an external drive as a volume 
> on the Synology NAS. What this means is that you can then use the web UI to 
> copy all the data from the old volume to the new one. The process all takes 
> place in the background. No computer is involved, and if both devices are 
> hard-wired to the router with good cabling, it goes like a rocket, even while 
> DSM is verifying volumes after the installation of new drives.
> Having to depend so much on sighted assistance for a computer task in 2014 
> does not sit well with me in the slightest. But it was a necessary evil given 
> that I couldn’t find anything accessible to do what I wanted as well as the 
> Synology does. Now that I have it set up the way I want, it really is 
> impressive. It’s very fast, it can do a bunch of intensive tasks without 
> breaking a sweat, and as I write this, it’s happily backing itself up to 
> Amazon Glacier with no discernible impact on anything else I need to do.
> Apart from the peace of mind of having my data backed up to the cloud without 
> me having to worry about it, and all the seamless support for various ways of 
> accessing content including a virtual private network, I’m very impressed 
> with the Synology AudioStation iOS app. This is like a super-sized iTunes 
> Match, and indeed I’m now considering not renewing my iTunes Match 
> subscription for another year. One of the problems with iTunes Match is the 
> paltry 25000 tracks you’re allowed to upload to it. This is a fraction of my 
> music collection, and it means I need to maintain two iTunes libraries, one 
> for iTunes Match and a general one. AudioStation gives me access to my entire 
> audio collection, anywhere I have an Internet connection. I’ve now set up the 
> indexing so that not only my music, but also the spoken word content I have 
> such as old time radio and audio described movies is all available through 
> this app.
> And this is where a feature of the DS214Play comes in very handy. Quite a bit 
> of the spoken word audio I have is encoded in OGG Vorbis, which the default 
> Music app in iOS doesn’t play. The DS214Play has a transcoder built in. 
> Behind the scenes, without you needing to even worry about the fact that this 
> is going on, the NAS takes an OGG file, re-encodes it on the fly, and sends 
> it to the iPhone in MP3 so it can be played. It will also do this with a raft 
> of other audio and video formats. Genius! So now that it’s set up, I can 
> truly play absolutely anything, anywhere, all from my phone.
> When you first install the current version of the AudioStation iOS app, 
> there’s one accessibility issue that can be fixed. When you flick through the 
> list of albums, VoiceOver speaks nothing. This was seriously limiting my use 
> of the app, until I discovered that the problem can be fixed by going into 
> the app’s Settings, and changing the view to “List”. Voila, albums now speak.
> Some of the buttons are labelled in a bit of a verbose way, but there’s 
> nothing that prevents use of this remarkable app. This gives you all the 
> benefits of the iOS experience, but frees you from the walled garden of 
> Apple’s limited format support and small iTunes Match size.
> The NAS itself is DLAN and Airplay-aware, so you can, for example, send 
> content directly from the NAS to an Apple TV, without having to get your iOS 
> device involved at all. AudioStation for iOS really does have that “wow” 
> factor. It is brilliant.
> There are similar apps for video, downloading, photos, file management and 
> more, and they are all useable. 
> In summary, the Synology DS214Play is a welcome addition to our network here 
> at home that is quite the game changer. Setting it up is needlessly 
> challenging. It occurs to me that there might be a bit of money to be made by 
> a coder who could make an accessible GUI wrapper for the command line 
> interface. And since most NAS manufacturers offer a command line interface 
> with a common feature set, a product like this which takes user input from a 
> GUI and sends it to the command line could be used on a wide range of drives. 
> If any blind person fancies having a go at this, I’d love to test.
> But I hope we might be able to use this post to somehow start a conversation 
> with Synology about solving the accessibility issues once and for all. 
>  
> Jonathan Mosen
> Mosen Consulting
> Blindness technology eBooks, tutorials and training
> http://Mosen.org
>  
> Back to top
> Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper           
> Michael Marshall <[email protected]>: Aug 27 08:48AM +1000 
> 
> if you do a backup of the hole system then you change a few files can it back 
> up incrementally? i wouldn’t want to do an entire backup every time. Time 
> machine allows me to do this.
> Agent086b <[email protected]>: Aug 27 09:51AM +1000 
> 
> Hi,
> I also use an off site backup called Lastpass and a time machine backup as 
> well. The off site backup is incase the house is broken into and all 
> equipment is stolen. Also if the house is burnt down I can still get all of 
> my data.
> Max
>  
> Back to top
> accessible nas disc question           
> Kliphton Senior <[email protected]>: Aug 26 07:49PM -0400 
> 
> Yes, have to agree with mark here. I have a my cloud 4 EX from western
> digital. 16TB, on my network. This is where I store my 7TB iTunes
> library of music, TV shows, and movies. A lot of people who use this one
> set it up in rade mode, so they will have a copy of what they have on there.
> I am stingy, I like using all 16TB of the nas, so I back my media and
> important documents up on 2 4TB USB hard drives that I only plug up when I
> am backing something up. But yes, westn digital is very accessible. I use
> it to stream movies to my iPhone and iPad when I am on business across the
> country, and it works flawlessly!
>  
>  
> Frustrated with your Mac, I-device, or AppleTV? New user and want quick
> efficient answers? Or maybe you know apple products and want to contribute?
> Then come join a list where questions are always answered, and we are always
> patient with you.
> Subscribe here: [email protected]
> All are welcome!
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of M. Taylor
> Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2014 5:00 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: RE: accessible nas disc question
>  
> Hello William,
>  
> Personally, I do not recommend NAS storage devices as their software
> interface is proprietary. 
>  
> However, if this is what you want then I think the Western Digital MyCloud
> series is among the best. I've never had one go bad on me nor have any of
> my friends. In fact, I have two MyCloud NAS drives working on my home
> network, right now. Also, Western Digital customer service is excellent.
> They really know their products.
>  
> I saw a 3TB MyCloud NAS drive at Best Buy 2 days ago for around $120.00.
>  
> Mark
>  
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected]
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of William Windels
> Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2014 1:13 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: accessible nas disc question
>  
> Hello,
> I would like to buy a has disc.
> It should be my first has disc and I don't know that much about the types
> that exists at the moment.
>  
> I would like to have the following:
> -     a nas disc with as good as accessible interface (from osx, windows
> and iOS);
> -     accessing the files from osx , windows and iOS;
> -     the nas disc should also have the function of a time-machine backup
> disc;
> -     I think a storage of at least 2tb should be possible?
>  
> Prices are not important at this moment.
>  
> Any hints are very welcome,
>  
> kind regards,
> William Windels
>  
> --
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> insert key remapping not working on right side of the keyboard under Fusion 
> ...           
> Jeff Bishop <[email protected]>: Aug 26 09:39PM 
> 
> Wow, awesome stuff. Thank you so very much!
>  
>  
> From: [email protected] 
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Scott Erichsen
> Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2014 2:14 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: RE: insert key remapping not working on right side of the keyboard 
> under Fusion ...
>  
> Hi Jeff,
>  
> Through some trial and error with JFW in Fusion, I found a couple interesting 
> things when working on a Mac keyboard with no number pad.
>  
> What I found was that when in Windows in Fusion, turn on keyboard help with 
> Capslock+1 on the number row so you can play.
>  
> FN+semicolon, This should activate the JAWS cursor.
> FN+slash This will activate the PC cursor.
> FN +CapsLock+semicolon This is the route PC to JAWS
> FN +CapsLock+slash This will route Jaws to PC
>  
> Experiment with FN + the keys on the righthand side of the keyboard . What is 
> happening is that the FN key + the keys on the righthand side of the keyboard 
> are acting as a numpad. So, you can also find the combos to right and left 
> click and page up/pagedown just like on the numpad.
>  
> I do find this to be a pain and will take some getting used too, but, it does 
> work.
>  
> Try it out and good luck.
>  
> Hope this helps.
>  
> Scott
>  
>  
> From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jeff Bishop
> Sent: Wednesday, 27 August 2014 5:20 AM
> To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
> Subject: RE: insert key remapping not working on right side of the keyboard 
> under Fusion ...
>  
> I am not using SharpKeys to remap the capslock key though.
>  
> From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Moore
> Sent: Tuesday, August 26, 2014 12:13 PM
> To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: insert key remapping not working on right side of the keyboard 
> under Fusion ...
>  
> Jeff,
> If you're running Seil, you don't need sharp keys. Seil can remap the caps 
> lock key to the insert key. Carabiner also gives you a numeric keypad which 
> you can access using the fn plus the keys on the right side (7 8 9 u i o j k 
> l m / ; p 0).
>  
> Chris
> On Aug 26, 2014, at 1:24 PM, Jeff Bishop 
> <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>  
> Hello Everyone,
>  
> OK, this is a very strange one and I am hoping someone can lend some advice 
> here.
>  
> I have a MacBook Pro running Fusion. I use Seil and Karabiner to remap my 
> caps lock key to the Insert key. I use SharpKeys to flip my alt and window 
> key mappings and all of this is working as I expect, with one exception...
>  
> I normally use a full sized Apple keyboard while at the office with a numeric 
> keypad on the right. So, this means that the caps lock key doesn't play a 
> role here for the most part and everything works well for me using the JAWS 
> desktop layout.
>  
> I have found that if I use the insert key on the numeric keypad or the caps 
> lock key while in Laptop mode that none of the keys past the J key work. 
> Meaning, I can do things like insert-t, caps lock plus s, etc., etc. but 
> anything on the right-hand side of the keyboard doesn't work.
>  
> Something interesting to note is that the laptop keys don't work whether 
> using caps lock or the insert key on the numeric keypad past the letter J.
>  
> Has anyone run into this issue at all? If so your advice is hugely 
> appreciated.
>  
> I am wondering if the newer versions of Karabiner or Seil have broken 
> something here?
>  
> Jeff
>  
>  
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> sharing activities?           
> Joe Quinn <[email protected]>: Aug 26 04:19PM -0500 
> 
> ok,found out how to use activities and it's cool. Now, to answer John's 
> initial question, I think just exporting your voiceover prefs, you'll be able 
> to share your activities with others. I've not tried this, but I don't see 
> why it wouldn't work!
>  
> Sent from my iPhone
>  
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