Hi Scott,

                In part you pointed out one of my issues, that is the
lagging need to use MS-Office.  I was also clear that I felt that this will
hopefully be resolved soon.  Furthermore I have the need to use Openbook for
scanning and reading documents.  Another area that I find that I must resort
to windows is while browsing the web.  Safari is just not up to the task in
all cases.  We had a thread the other day talking about this.  Just about
weekly we have someone telling about a web site that they cannot access with
safari.  I must access a site for bids with the government and safari will
not display properly with vo.  I love the mail app, however you may notice
that I am in windows right now.  That is because my professor is about to
send me a quiz that I must use MS-Office to access for now.  I have tried
like hell to make a total switch, however at this time it is just not
possible for me.  

Sincerely,

Scott

 

 

From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Scott Howell
Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2010 8:02 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Can keyboard only navigation ever be...

 

Sott I just can't agree with you about the level of productivity. Whenever
someone says this, I find their scope is very narrow. If you were to base
your productivity on one application or on specialized software, perhaps
that would be true. The only software I need at work now is Microsoft
Office. This is primarily because I do not have iWork and some compatibility
issues with WOrd documents still exists. However, for research, e-mail, and
managing my calendar are all done on the Mac. So, I am just having a hard
time understanding how you can consider the "PC" (i.e. WIndows) as being
more productive when so many examples of productive users exists. Can you
further define what you mean?

On Oct 10, 2010, at 4:35 PM, Scott Ford wrote:





Hi John,

            I was just mentioning on the list the other day, that I
frequently find myself needing to boot into windows on my Mac to complete
work because the application does not exist or thedoes not work as well as
on the PC.  I truly feel that the Mac software is making leaps and great
strides with every new release, however looking at the two platforms
critically I feel the Mac is just not quite there.  I am willing to bet that
within the next year this will not be the case.  The switchers are growing
by the day.  The other little option not found on the pc  is the fact that
one can boot into windows or run vm ware fusion to access windows.  On their
Mac.  I am  an Adaptive Technology specialist, every month I am getting more
and more requests about the Mac.  The truth is that many people dislike the
fact that one must use many more keys than on the pc, however we are seeing
that Apple is addressing this with each subsequent release as well.  For
example the quick nav and the magic track pad gestures for Voice over.  I
guess what I am attempting to say is  that I feel the answer is not a cut
and dried one.  There are positives and negatives on both sides of the
issue.    The bottom line is that looking at a pure productivity stand point
the pc would have it hands down right now.  This will continue to change
with Apples continued commitment to voice over and the adaptive technology
that it continues to incorporate in the OS.  I hope that this helps.

Sincerely,

Scott

 

On Oct 10, 2010, at 2:50 PM, Neil Barnfather - TalkNav wrote:





Carolyn,

 

thank you, not a soap box, your comments are echoed by many, and I too do
not wish to continue to pay for JAWS where not needed.

 

but, firstly, I am not comparing apples and oranges, the single finger
navigation of a PC is not thanks to Freedom Scientific nor JAWS etc, its
Microsoft and Windows, all there, in the box on day one.

 

Apple have been in this game for just as long as MS and the sighted Mac user
can use their Mac in this way.

 

All I want is that level playing field.

 

Many are suggesting Quick Nav, sure this helps, but it is still beyond what
the sighted Mac keyboard user needs to do.

 

Again, please let's not turn this into a cost argument, you cannot say that
Voice Over is better or fine or acceptable just because it costs nothing,
sure there's an argument to be had there, but it's not this one, this
conversation I would ask to have nothing to do with cost.

 

its so very easy to turn this into a well Freedom Scientific and other
accessibility companies charge so very much, and they do, rightly or
wrongly, and therefore Apple is better. this is a conversation about one
persons needs on a purely which solution works better, and can I get the
Apple approach to work for me, with the benefit and wizdom of the folk on
this list.

 

I have already learned something new about Quick Nav, and that is that you
can using down and left / right respecively initiate interact mode on / off.
this helps a lot.

 

Twitter @neilbarnfather

 

Neil Barnfather

Talks List Administrator

 

TalkNav is a Nuance, Code Factory and Sendero dealer, for all your
accessible phone, PDA and GPS related enquiries visit
<http://www.talknav.com/> www.talknav.com

 

From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com]on Behalf Of Carolyn
Sent: 10 October 2010 19:30
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Can keyboard only navigation ever be...

 

Hi Neil and others:

I have an interesting prospective, having worked with a Mac for almost a
year, and only made the switch semi-successfully.  Further, I'm not a
genius, a tech expert, or even a wizzard.  I'm just a computer user who is
fascinated by what I can achieve with the technology and like to use it for
my daily functioning. 

Having said these things, I've never been one to accomplish tasks with JAWS
using one finger.  That to me is a big stretch.  Unless, of course you are a
wizzard:).

Secondly, you are comparing Apples with Oranges here.  Two totally different
operating systems, two totally different ways of doing things.  Microsoft
has been doing their thing including JAWS since the 80's or at least the
early 90's  If you're bent on being a finger wizzard, ok, great for you.   I
also find myself frustrated by some of the fingering requirements of the OS
with Voiceover.  It's far from perfect.  But, to    expect the same level of
comfort from a system that is a standard, out-of-the-box system is putting
the bar too high for a company that is finally trying to level the
playingfield for us.

Perhaps I'm on the defensive because I've made a big investment in time and
energy to get as far as I have on the MAC.  But, I did so knowing this field
hasn't been thoroughly plowed.  I wanted to have an option other than paying
Freedom Scientific another 900 to get JAWS up-to-date.  Which meant no new
computer for at least a couple more years.  So, I requested a Mac as a
Christmas present, and I'm doing my best to make this an option for me and
others who, like me, don't think we should have to pay more to get less.

Now, if I had the PC down to one-finger use, as you say you have, perhaps
I'd be telling a different story.  For now, I'm pretty happy to learn and
grow into a system as it grows and developes, rather than forking out
another thousand to line the pockets of specialty providers.

End of soapbox.  Thanks for reading.

 

Carolyn

 

 

----- Original Message -----

From: Neil Barnfather - <mailto:for...@talknav.com>  TalkNav

To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com

Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2010 11:02 AM

Subject: Can keyboard only navigation ever be...

 

Dear All,

Many of you will have seen me around before on the various lists so no need
for introductions, I've been a PC user now for in excess of 20 years, and
have attempted to make the switch to Mac now 3 times without success.

The first point I want to make is that this is not for lack of desire upon
my behalf, rather it is my hope that I am simply missing an essential piece
of the puzzle. this missing part though appears, to me at least, to be the
key, the magic link between making a successful jump or not.

I've heard all the usual shpeal about, it's not like a PC, so you cannot
think of it like that, put everything you've ever learned about screen
readers aside and think differently or a fresh, it's just the learning
curve, stick with it and you'll get there...

All of which I've tried and failed at... and when I asked an Apple Genius to
watch over me in a store to analyse where I was going wrong, his response, I
don't understand, you've mastered OSx, it has to be Voice Over...

So here it is, wide open for you, the cream of the switching community to
hopefully answer once and for all.

In an e-mail to Apple's illusive Accessibility team, I once commented that
if you took 2 PC users, one sighted and one not, removed the mouse from the
sighted user, that the 2 PC users would both use their computers in the same
way. i.e. that the key strokes / commands are all the same.

However, get 2 Mac users, one sighted one not, remove the mouse from the
sighted user, the 2 users both use the keyboard differently.

This thus forcing the Mac Voice Over user to learn the screen reader either
before, or alongside, the actual computer and the OS itself.

This of course not being so, from my perspective anyhow, on the PC, where
both users, keyboard exclusive or not, both use the machine in the same way.

My biggest hurdle to date is the keyboard commands and their implementation
on the Mac, it's not that they are different, as I can live with that, it's
the same as buying a new HiFi system, the buttons are in different places
and of a different design.

What I cannot seem to get over is that with a PC, 95% of what I do is one
handed and in 95% of those instances can be achieved with one finger.
leaving my left hand free to handle papers, telephones etc, etc.

comparatively, with Voice Over and the Mac, I am finding that I have to use
both hands for the most basic level of navigation, and also that many
commands are as a minimal 3 keys to implement.

Many have suggested work around such as the Magic Track Pad, indeed, this
would in effect make the Mac behave similarly to the iPhone, iPod Touch, and
iPad, all 3 of which I own.

However, one cannot get over the fact that this detracts from productivity,
or on the surface of it seems to, this being brought about by the user
moving their hand(s) from the keyboard to the track pad and back again.

*Note* I understand that Mac Book's have the track pad built in, but it's
still relocating your hands from one input device to another and back again.

So here's the question which really appears to be the initial clincher for
me, is it possible to use a Mac with essentially one hand and even more
importantly one finger for most commands and navigation.

I would say, to be fair, that' it's the navigation with one hand or one
finger that is the most important thing. all of JAWS commands require two
fingers or more, but it's the navigation that I just cannot get myself
passed. On my PC using JAWS virtually everything I'm doing is one fingered.

So, is this possible on the Mac...? the caveat to this should be, that I do
not see the point of spending countless hours re-allocating or arranging
existing commands / navigation commands. It seems to me that Voice Over's
biggest hurdle is the Voice Over command keys, Control + Options key, please
forgive me if I missed up Control and Command.

Please no-one, this is not a that's JAWS this is Voice Over question, this
is a... Can I use Voice Over and the Mac with one hand or better still one
finger for navigation of the Mac itself?

Setting the record straight at the get go, this is not an Apple slating, I
wish to make the switch, but it has to be because it's as easy or easier,
the fact that Voice Over is more stable is a factor, but not a huge one.

I do not buy all the security hype, nor the OS enhancements or stability
front. Yes Voice Over is more stable than JAWS / Window Eyes, but
principally because it is part of the operating platform, and not because
its superior or that Mac OSx is.

This statement about operating platforms may have held some degree of water
back in the days gone by, but with Windows 7, and a decent PC specification,
one can get as much performance and stability out of a PC as a Mac.
moreover, in terms of security, I've never known anyone I know who has a
brain using a PC to get a virus, the problem is that the PC world is where
the masses are, and many of those masses are nits, and they do stupid
things... when the PC pops up asking if they wish to install and download a
virus to delete all their data, they um, then ah, and then click OK. well
that's stupidity and not Windows being vulnerable.

*Note* I do accept that if you introduce JAWS or Window Eyes to a PC that
this can affect OS performance and stability. Indeed, my technical support
staff have many a time commented, how to watch an amazing machine, filled
with the latest technology, working like a dream turn to treacle, install
JAWS.

this is true, and is a significant factor to me wishing to jump ship, of
course if FS did what Microsoft did with Windows 7, i.e. dropped the whole
program and started a fresh, I believe that JAWS could seriously give Voice
Over a run for its money on the stability front. as it happens this move is
highly unlikely.

So there it is folks, what do you Apple wizards think?

best regards.

Twitter @neilbarnfather

Neil Barnfather
Talks List Administrator

TalkNav is a Nuance, Code Factory and Sendero dealer, for all your
accessible phone, PDA and GPS related enquiries visit www.talknav.com
<http://www.talknav.com/> 


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