Not meaning to be rude, but if you think this bug compares to editting text
with a BT keyboard on Android, then I have some honest to god news for you.
Editting with Android and a BT keyboard is phenominally disgusting! right
now!
Write me off list if you want more detail, but I assure you, editting on I O
S is way! way! better.
clgillan...@gmail.com
Chris.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Devin Prater" <d.pra...@me.com>
To: <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, October 24, 2015 8:29 AM
Subject: Re: What's the word with the update for El Capitan and VO
I know Apple can do well. I've seen it a lot in iOS. But we just have bugs
upon bugs to deal with, and I'm just not sure what the quality control
people do with accessibility. For example, right now there is a bug in iOS
where if you use a bluetooth keyboard and arrow arround, and you hit a
space, it won't say space at all. Sure, the smallest of bugs, but it still
makes Apple look sloppy, just like Google. Google has had this problem with
Docs for ages, but everywhere else Apple is wonderful, but they're starting
to fail at accessibility.
Sent from my iPhone
On Oct 24, 2015, at 1:28 AM, Sabahattin Gucukoglu <listse...@me.com>
wrote:
I don’t agree that executives shouldn’t know about accessibility. They
may not know the details, but they ought to understand the urgency and
importance. Steve Jobs was once the CEO of Apple and he demoed the latest
products for his admiring audience; he didn’t palm the job off to his
engineers. If Steve Jobs could understand what made Apple products great,
then so can his underlings, past and future.
As for the comment that VoiceOver is merely one part of accessibility,
that may be completely accurate, but it’s irrelevant to a discussion about
quality control. We are the customers and we expect a great experience
while using VoiceOver. Perhaps you accept that a mainstream company can
never deliver the quality expected of an accessibility company, but others
might not. To these people, Apple’s offering is inferior and you are
endorsing the view that we should merely be grateful for an inferior
alternative instead of what we deserve. I am one of these people. I want
and expect VoiceOver to be indistinguishable in quality from fully-paid
Windows screen readers, and fear that Apple’s internalising of VoiceOver
puts it under unwelcome business pressures that adversely affect us,
particularly in recent times, and not just for an initial release either.
I would prefer not to move to Windows, but if I did, it would only because
I finally accepted that Apple’s strategy was untenable.
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