Hi Dane,

Are those menus popping up in Fusion accessible?  If so, does VoiceOver or 
Window-Eyes read that info?

Please visit http://BlindWebAccess.com and sign the petition asking Yahoo! 
to make their CAPTCHA accessible!
Darrell Shandrow - Accessibility Evangelist
Information should be accessible to us without need of translation by 
another person.
Blind Access Journal blog and podcast: http://www.blindaccessjournal.com
Check out high quality telecommunications services at http://ld.net/?nu7i
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dane Trethowan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2007 5:09 PM
Subject: Macbooks, they sound very nice


Hi all!
Just got my new Macbook yesterday and I have to say that I'm
pleasantly surprised at how good they sound. I haven't determined
exactly where the speakers are in the computer itself yet <lol>.
I was actually warned against getting the new Macbook, I was told
that the speakers were incredibly quiet and lacked bass, if the first
point was true then this would have ben an issue for me as I have a
hearing impairment and I may have had to consider using external
speakers. I'm glad to say however that these things boast plenty of
volume and plenty of dynamic range so bass or the top end isn't a
problem, more than acceptable in my view for a notebook device.
Now here's the really interesting bit as far as audio goes, like my
Imac the Macbook has both analog and digital in and out for sound,
I've played a DVD on this model and connected it directly to my
surround-sound receiver which I reviewed here about 2 years ago,
results were spectacular with all the surround-sound functionality
working as it should. You can of course, connnect something like an
Imic for added audio flexability, I will be doing this so that I can
have one device dedicated to record/playback and the other completely
devoted to speekc, system sounds, playing audio "on-the-fly" and so
forth, the excellent recording software Audio Hijack Pro and the
excellent audio editing software Sound Studio will of course be an
absolute must for this notebook too.
FInally, I'm using Fusion to run a WIndows XP virtual machine with
Window-eyes and no problem with audio either though you have to tell
Fusion when you've plugged in the Imic if you want to use it with
Windows XP and associated software such as Winamp or Total Recorder,
this is done through a menu which pops up in fusion, these menus pop
up for all connected devices to your Macbook and give you choices on
how you want Fusion and Windows XP to connect to them, I think
there's an "auto-detect" mode somewhere in there too.
Hope this was of interest to some people, I could go further in my
discussion of the Macbook but... welll... this is an audio list <lol>




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