Hi, I'm forcing myself to use quicknav today, just because. So, I've done some googling and some reading and some playing, but I sense that I'm not getting the most out of quicknav, because to be honest, it's somewhat more convenient, but I'm not as blown away by the simplicity as I thought I would be.
So far, I've got left+right turn qn on or off. down+right interact. left+down stop interacting. left+up and up+right, move around the router. up+down perform the default action on an item in the voiceover curser. Arrow keys on their own are used to navigate in the desired direction. Now, I'm thinking there must be more to this. For one thing, I'm finding it counter-intuitive because I generally don't interact with things. For example, I would normally arrow up and down the messages table in mail or the mailboxes table without interacting. This will read me the entire row of information and I usually find that to be what I want to happen. If I sit on the messages table with qn and press the down arrow, of course it takes me to the scroll bars and things, and in order to read the messages table, I have to either interact with it, or turn qn off. There are ways I can get around this in some tables, for example, if I know what I want I can press the first letter or first few letters. That will work some of the time, but in the messages table of mail, I want to scan them all, not usually specific ones, so it falls over. So, how do people get along with this all the time? or are we all sitting here turning qn on and off all the time depending on the situation? Am I missing any qn features? Thanks, Erik Burggraaf Check out my first ever podcast tutorial, Learn braille using the braille box. Visit http://www.erik-burggraaf.com and click podcasts to read more and subscribe. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To post to this group, send email to macvisionar...@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.