I have no personal experience with the following , but somebody on another list 
I belong to like a program call Tables for this purpose.  Currently I don't 
work with tables but thought this might be of interest.  I may be way off the 
mark.




On Dec 2, 2009, at 8:12 AM, Chris Hofstader wrote:

> If you don't like JAWS in spreadsheets then you will hate Macintosh in 
> similar programs.
> 
> JAWS provides a ton of semantically interesting ways to navigate in Excel.  
> You can get lists of cells with data, set row and column headings and have 
> them follow you to files with similar titles, have multiple "regions" on a 
> sheet with multiple tables, read the data in charts and graphs, do all sorts 
> of interesting things on a braille line to optimize use of that expensive  
> real estate, etc.  Just hit JAWSKEY+V to bring up the verbosity dialogue or 
> pop up JAWS hot key help for Excel and you'll find dozens of features 
> unavailable in any other screen reader although Window-Eyes is catching up in 
> spite of FS hitting them with a patent suit regarding augmented information 
> in a spreadsheet.
> 
> I didn't know about these buttons in cells but I'd bet if you can access them 
> through VB script then you can get at them with a slight change to the JAWS 
> scripts.  If you look into the VB object model for Excel and find this item, 
> send it to Eric Damery at FS and he'll probably get it into the Excel scripts 
> very quickly.
> 
> The web 2.0 stuff, if it follows the Aria guidelines (you can find it at 
> www.w3c.org/wai) actually work quite good with JAWS but far less well with 
> all other screen readers.  Because there are official guidelines, it 
> shouldn't be too hard for the other screen access tools to catch up but, as 
> is often the case, FS got IBM to pay them big time consulting dollars to add 
> Aria support to JAWS so they could  deploy some stuff and have an 
> accessibility solution ripe and ready.
> 
> Overall, I find the Macintosh to provide a really superior  experience but it 
> has its limitations.  One could probably add features very similar to the 
> cool stuff JAWS does in excel to VO plus OpenOffice using any number of 
> interesting techniques but it would take a pretty solid screen reader hacker 
> with an understanding of the guts of both VO and OO to pull it off and, 
> sadly, I don't think there are too many people really diving into the 
> hardcore technical side of Macintosh accessibility who do not work for Apple.
> 
> cdh   
> 
> On Dec 2, 2009, at 9:52 AM, John W. Carty wrote:
> 
>> Could you please discuss spreadsheet limits using vo in more detail. I'm 
>> struggling to make the move to a mac and I use a lot of spreadsheets.
>> 
>> I work in an environment that uses a lot of spreadsheets and I've always 
>> been disappointed with jaws support for excel. In a professional environment 
>> I encounter spreadsheets almost daily that uses vba buttons embedded in 
>> cells that jaws cannot see. this has been a problem forever and fs has never 
>> done anything to solve this issue thru out office not just excel.
>> 
>> I believe web 2.0 is going to reek havoc for screen reader users for many 
>> years regardless of the screen reader.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Chris Hofstader [mailto:c...@hofstader.com]
>> Sent: Wednesday, December 02, 2009 8:22 AM
>> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
>> Subject: Re: Economics and the Mac
>> 
>> I think VO does a poor job with spreadsheets, containing none of the 
>> semantic navigation features in JAWS or WE.  It generally does a hardly 
>> adequate job in all tabular constructs and struggles with complex web 2.0 
>> apps like googledocs.
>> On Dec 1, 2009, at 5:47 PM, James & Nash wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> I'm not looking to upset anyone, but can I ask why do you think that VO and 
>>> NVDA are not quite up to the standard set by JFW and We?
>>> 
>>> Mac OS X 10.6 set the VO bar extremely high. This release has made VO a 
>>> fully functional and viable solution for Blind computer users who wish to 
>>> use a Mac. I am not saying that improvements do not need to be made, but 
>>> that goes for all of the Screen Readers on all of the platforms and the 
>>> operating systems generally. I admit that prior to this, whilst VO was very 
>>> good, it did not quite hit the mark, and Apple's approach to accessibility 
>>> seemed to be stagnating - and so I migrated back to Windows. This was a 
>>> personal choice though.
>>> 
>>> Keep in mind, that; NVDA, Orca and VO work in a very different way to JFW 
>>> and Window Eyes. All three use object navigation - a concept which allows 
>>> us as blind users to gain an idea of what our sighted co-workers etc are 
>>> seeing on the screen. This is a radical concept, and one which Apple has 
>>> been slammed for pursuing. It is also worth remembering that both Orca and 
>>> Voice Over are being used on operating systems which are fundamentally and 
>>> vastly different to Windows, both in concept and design.
>>> 
>>> I do not mean this to be a patronising or condescending E-Mail, I am just 
>>> curious as to why you think VO is not yet up to the standard of the 
>>> commercial offerings of the Windows world? Please bare in mind, that these 
>>> are just my opinions. If you'd like to discuss this further, please contact 
>>> me of list as i think we may be going off topic here.
>>> 
>>> TC
>>> 
>>> James
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On 1 Dec 2009, at 22:10, John G. Heim wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Several years ago, Microsoft began working on improvements to narrator that
>>>> would make it a realistically usable screen reader. But the National
>>>> Federation of the Blind asked them to stop. The reasoning was that if
>>>> Microsoft improved narrator, it might drive Freedom Scientific and GW Micro
>>>> out of business. They thought that narrator would never reach the quality 
>>>> of
>>>> Jaws and window-eyes yet it might still be good enough to drive those
>>>> products out of the market.
>>>> 
>>>> Obviously, that decision was somewhat controversial at the time. I argued
>>>> that it made no sense to think that narrator could be at once too crummy to
>>>> be used and at the same time good enough to drive jFS and GWM out of
>>>> business. I didn't anticipate the development of the other free screen
>>>> readers, voiceover, nvda, and orca. But certainly, that's another point
>>>> against the NFB position.
>>>> 
>>>> On the other hand, I don't think I'd like to switch to voiceover or nvda
>>>> full-time. They are not quite up to the standard set by jaws yet.
>>>> 
>>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>> From: "Lynn Schneider" <canepri...@gmail.com>
>>>> To: <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
>>>> Sent: Monday, November 30, 2009 10:54 PM
>>>> Subject: Re: Economics and the Mac
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> I purchased my first Apple computer about three months ago.  I will never
>>>> forget the feeling of complete surprise and joy at being able to just turn
>>>> the iMac on and get it talking within minutes.  Microsoft is not to blame
>>>> for not having default Windows access out of the box, blind people are to
>>>> blame.  As Mark said, thinking outside the box can get you into hot water.
>>>> A few years ago on a blindness-related list, I made the cataclysmic mistake
>>>> of expressing my wish that some day, windows would be accessible out of the
>>>> box.  You would not believe the hate mail I received from tons of blind
>>>> people basically saying that I wanted a free lunch, I was ungrateful for 
>>>> all
>>>> the hard work and research of the screen reader companies, etc. etc.
>>>> Honestly, it was totally shocking to me that I would get such ire for 
>>>> simply
>>>> suggesting that we ought to have access to something our sighted peers take
>>>> for granted without having to pay thousands of dollars extra.  But, being 
>>>> on
>>>> this list and seeing all the other blind switchers out there, I feel at
>>>> least a tiny bit vindicated, as blind people are starting to see the
>>>> benefits of universal access.  I really think it is the young blind people
>>>> who are going to demand universal access, at least I hope so.  They are the
>>>> ones who are going to benefit most from being able to buy an iPhone or iPod
>>>> Touch like their peers and just start using the thing, and they are
>>>> hopefully going to demand more of that.  With chips being so cheap now,
>>>> there is absolutely no reason why universal access cannot be built right
>>>> into things.  The best thing we can all do is to spread the word far and
>>>> wide about what Apple has been able to accomplish with their products and
>>>> make them an example of what can be.
>>>> 
>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 9:27 PM, Richie Gardenhire wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> I have changed the subject line to more reflect on the discussion at
>>>>> hand.  If Apple can set aside resources to make their Mac computers
>>>>> universally marketed across the board, there is no reason why
>>>>> Microsoftshouldn't, (and they definitely have the resources and the
>>>>> technical expertise throughout the company) to do so.  And if it
>>>>> brings the prices down, and Microsoft does, for example, develop a
>>>>> mechanism by which Windows can be installed out of the box without
>>>>> sighted assistance, companies such as Freedom Scientific would then be
>>>>> forced to either go with the trend; otherwise, they would lose their
>>>>> economic dolars; after all, isn't that what competition for tax
>>>>> dollars and marketshare is all about?  In my humble opinion, for what
>>>>> it's worth, the only reason Freedom Scientific survives in the market
>>>>> is because they have contracted with some state agencies and
>>>>> government entities, and we bare the brunt of the expense ineirectly.
>>>>> I paid less for my car than I have for braille displays costing $8000
>>>>> to $12,000 dollars at a time.  In Alaska, for example, the biggest
>>>>> majority of vision loss occurs in the elderly population and baby
>>>>> boomers who are about to reach retirement age.  We have no school for
>>>>> the blind in Alaska; therefore, if parents want to send their blind
>>>>> kids off to a residential school, they would have to send them
>>>>> Stateside, which costs the state thousands of dollars which they could
>>>>> probably find other revenues to use elsewhere.There are a handful of
>>>>> us who are blind and visually-impaired Macusers, but that numberis
>>>>> increasing, as the word about VoiceOver gets out.  Richie Gardenhire,
>>>>> Anchorage, Alaska.
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 1:21 PM, carlene knight wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> I know that the companies take huge advantage of the fact that they
>>>>> have a guaranteed nitch and can charge whatever they want.  That's why
>>>>> I will not upgrade my JAWS SMA.  For one thing I don't need it and
>>>>> secondly, I don't want to pay that kind of price for an upgrade, but
>>>>> FS knows that they can get away with it because of a guaranteed
>>>>> market.  I'm not saying things could not change, but simply stating
>>>>> that you can't get JAWS or a Braille display from a  home electronics
>>>>> ore software store, and I wouldn't expect to happen any time soon if
>>>>> ever. In their eyes, why should They bother as they won't sell enough
>>>>> of them to make it worth their while.  There  is a cell phone put out
>>>>> by Capital Accessibility in Europe.  I've seen one and it's no big
>>>>> deal.  The speech is great, but there is no camera, digital screen, or
>>>>> anything that might ad a bit of a price to the phone.  It's built like
>>>>> a brick, but it is over $500 and though the speech is clear, it's very
>>>>> robotic.  Tell me that's not ridiculous?  I don't know that agencies
>>>>> are responsible for this one, but the phone is so tailored to our
>>>>> needs that somebody will buy it.  Not me.  Granted, if more people
>>>>> were learning braille and speech software as they were dealing with
>>>>> macular degeneration, and there was a big enough demand for it, things
>>>>> might come down a bit.  That's great about the scanner.  I'd better
>>>>> stop typing now as I am misspelling more things than I am typing
>>>>> correctly and am about to throw this keyboard, though it's not at fault.
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 1:46 PM, Richie Gardenhire wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>>> With all due respect, that argument has been used time and time
>>>>>> again.  To that, I say this: the best example of a product that has
>>>>>> gone down in price because of the acceptance of it by the sighted
>>>>>> community, is the optical scanner, which was originally intended for
>>>>>> use by the blind for scanning newspapers, magazines, and othr
>>>>>> documents in their computers or reading machines.  Back then, you had
>>>>>> to pay thousands of dolars for the machine, and ys, state agencies
>>>>>> bought it for us, if we were lucky.  Now, one can buy a scanner and to
>>>>>> a certain extent, software for scanning pictures, text, and other
>>>>>> document forms into one's PC, at a fraction of the cost it was in the
>>>>>> 1970's.  The point here is that it found a marketable niche among the
>>>>>> sighted community, and once they were mass-produced, prices started
>>>>>> coming down and people could afford said scanners.  While braille
>>>>>> displays are another issue, there are companies who are working to
>>>>>> make even displays more affordable and accepting to the universal
>>>>>> design market.  In the 1980's, Apple tried an experiment, using an
>>>>>> ordinary, dot matrix printer, to produce braille.  It wasn't the best
>>>>>> quality braille, but it was an experiment that, had it been popular,
>>>>>> might have flown.  Richie Gardenhire, Anchorage, Alaska.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 11:50 AM, carlene knight wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Unfortunately you have to be realistic though.  I agree with you in a
>>>>>> sense, but going into a store and buying JAWS or Window Eyes off of
>>>>>> the shelf?  That would be nice?  that's one reason I like the Mac and
>>>>>> accessories.  The people in the Mac and Apple stores will likely not
>>>>>> be trained for extensive use with Vo, but they should be able to make
>>>>>> sure it works.  Try going into a Best Buy
>>>>>> and asking them if JFW works.  We probably make up less than 10% of
>>>>>> the population so it isn't going to happen.  It would still be
>>>>>> expensive, and that's why I needed the agency to buy it for me.  Again
>>>>>> don't get me wrong, in a perfect world that might happen, but we all
>>>>>> know the world is far from perfect.  I'm not trying to defend anybody
>>>>>> necessarily, and I don't consider myself dependent because I need
>>>>>> assistance from them.  I got my own jobs, take care of myself, go
>>>>>> where I need to go etc.  A good organization helps people become
>>>>>> independent.  I agree that whenever possible, we should do for
>>>>>> ourselves and not be too dependent on anybody, agencies included.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 12:23 PM, Richie Gardenhire wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> And for this reason, I feel that many state agencies, (Alaska's,
>>>>>>> being
>>>>>>> one of them)will be cutting back services, in favor of other things
>>>>>>> and as Mark so eloquently pointed out, the elderly, the poor, and the
>>>>>>> disabled, will be hurt first.  I know thisis a different subject line
>>>>>>> from what was originally intended, and I apologize for that, but I
>>>>>>> will say one more thing on this, and that is that I'm in favor of
>>>>>>> universal design so that blind people can walk into any store and
>>>>>>> purchase off-the-shelf software and get it working and we not be
>>>>>>> forced to be co-dependent on state agencies to purchase our stuff.  I
>>>>>>> guess, in a way, I'm against state agencies for the reasons I stated
>>>>>>> above.  Richie Gardenhire, Anchorage, Alaska.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 10:32 AM, carlene knight wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Hi Mark:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> I certainly don't hold a grudge as everybody is entitled to their
>>>>>>> opinion.  However, if it weren't for the Commission for the blind
>>>>>>> here
>>>>>>> in Oregon, there is no way that I could perform the job I was hired
>>>>>>> for.  I had to have a programmer write JAWS scripts so that I could
>>>>>>> get to the buttons, read the drop down boxes that just had graphics
>>>>>>> for names, etc. I couldn't have afforded the thousands of dollars
>>>>>>> that
>>>>>>> has costed.  He is working as we speak since the company I work for
>>>>>>> has changed software and everything we had done in the past regarding
>>>>>>> the original software is now null and void.  I could have not
>>>>>>> afforded
>>>>>>> a Braille display at about 12,000 dollars.  I can say with certainty
>>>>>>> that there are few if any companies that would provide any of these
>>>>>>> services.  Unfortunately many government funded agencies, including
>>>>>>> the Oregon Commission for the blind  do know little about Mac
>>>>>>> accessibility as they have contracts with certain vendors, and, face
>>>>>>> it,whether we  like it or not, a majority of companies still use
>>>>>>> Windows based software.  My husband and I both decided on our own to
>>>>>>> try the Mac, and though I've had some problems, I'm glad I did.  I've
>>>>>>> learned it without an instructor.  We nearly lost our Commission last
>>>>>>> summer so when I hear people talking about how we shouldn't have
>>>>>>> government agencies such as this, I have to disagree though they do
>>>>>>> have their problems.  Yes, some people do rely on others to much, but
>>>>>>> not all of us do.  Like you, I grew up in the public school system in
>>>>>>> a rural area.  I was born blind also.  I'll get off my soap box now.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Nov 30, 2009, at 10:51 AM, Mark BurningHawk Baxter wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> You, and I to a lesser extent, and others are the exception.  I was
>>>>>>>> born blind, didn't go to any institutions for the blind, was raised
>>>>>>>> as
>>>>>>>> an only child, mostly in rural Vermont with minimal help from state
>>>>>>>> agencies.  Graduated from Dartmouth when I was 20, again with
>>>>>>>> minimal
>>>>>>>> if any help from agencies--didn't have my first experience with any
>>>>>>>> agencies or institutions for the blind until I was 24, when the
>>>>>>>> Carroll Center was offering a medical transcription course and I
>>>>>>>> needed another, safer place to be.  They kicked me out of their
>>>>>>>> dorm,
>>>>>>>> making me homeless, after six weeks there.  Rehab flatly refused to
>>>>>>>> support me and my music career in any way, and pressured me to go to
>>>>>>>> the Carroll Center in the first place, then pressured me to get
>>>>>>>> therapy and reform my ways when they made me homeless.  I only
>>>>>>>> started
>>>>>>>> cautiously learning how to deal with the agencies in 2007, when it
>>>>>>>> became clear that my failing hearing was going to force me out of
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>> transcription career I'd had for 13+ years.  I learned Jaws and
>>>>>>>> Windows essentially by myself, as I've always been good with tech.
>>>>>>>> Even now, while I may have learned a little about how to get along
>>>>>>>> with the agencies and get what I need, it's a very uneasy truce at
>>>>>>>> best./  I hope to be starting a job at another institution for the
>>>>>>>> blind soon, but this time as a trainer, not a student, which
>>>>>>>> hopefully
>>>>>>>> will turn out better.  You can see why I advocate for the abolition
>>>>>>>> of
>>>>>>>> such systems.  They do not foster independence of thinking, and tend
>>>>>>>> to punish outside-the-box people, in my experience.  I do realize
>>>>>>>> that
>>>>>>>> people blinded later in life may not adapt as fully as those born
>>>>>>>> blind; I'm learning that as I lose my hearing, so I have the
>>>>>>>> privilege
>>>>>>>> of seeing both sides of the coin, but think about what that
>>>>>>>> implies--
>>>>>>>> that the pressure on those whose world has already been blasted by
>>>>>>>> losing their sight will essentially become putty in the hands of
>>>>>>>> high-
>>>>>>>> pressure agencies who are set in their ways.  The system seems to
>>>>>>>> punish at both ends--if you're too independent, you're pressured to
>>>>>>>> conform; if you're new to blindness, you're taught not to think for
>>>>>>>> yourself.  Hell, I didn't even do mobility orienting stuff until
>>>>>>>> last
>>>>>>>> year, when Rehab here in CA suggested I ry it, and I decided, in the
>>>>>>>> interests of keeping the peace, what the heck; my mobility teacher
>>>>>>>> quickly realized that there was very little, beyond the immediate
>>>>>>>> rehearsing of directions, that she could improve upon what I and my
>>>>>>>> dog were already going.  Since I got Trekker, that's even more so;
>>>>>>>> now
>>>>>>>> that Trekker is temporarily broken, I truly feel the loss. :)  I
>>>>>>>> don't
>>>>>>>> see how the agencies really have done me any good, other than in the
>>>>>>>> purely material realm, and if I weren't as articulate as I am about
>>>>>>>> stating my needs, and as forceful as I am about what I need, which
>>>>>>>> most people are not, even that gain might be minimal, and even now
>>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>>> damage is significant.  So, that's where my beef with the system(s)
>>>>>>>> comes in; sorry if that makes it a personal grudge, but there you
>>>>>>>> are
>>>>>>>> then.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Mark BurningHawk Baxter
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Skype and Twitter:  BurningHawk1969
>>>>>>>> MSN:  burninghawk1...@hotmail.com
>>>>>>>> My home page:
>>>>>>>> http://MarkBurningHawk.net/
>>>>>>>> 
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