Hi. I just do a VO and J to jump into the body of the message. It’s quicker
than opening and closing a message.
> On 27 Feb 2017, at 21:20, Kawal Gucukoglu wrote:
>
> I use the e-mail on the Mac as Mark has described. However, if a message is
> too long, then it doesn't read all of it so you
I use the e-mail on the Mac as Mark has described. However, if a message is
too long, then it doesn't read all of it so you need to press the enter key to
open the message and explore what it says. Also if you have one message, voice
over won't read that automatically for me so I need to open
Hello:
Your way is really excellent, i am now using it in a very easy way,
Thanks
> On Feb 27, 2017, at 4:47 AM, M. Taylor wrote:
>
> Hello Ramy,
>
> First, I suggest that you use the Standard view in Mail as opposed to the
> Classic view.
>
> Assuming this is your setup, then, when you inter
Hello, Thanks so much, but i tried just right errow and it’s working great
Thanks so much for your help
> On Feb 27, 2017, at 4:34 PM, Tim Kilburn wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> If you prefer to use the method that you're used to, then you only need one
> extra step. After cmd-o to open the message thre
Hi,
If you prefer to use the method that you're used to, then you only need one
extra step. After cmd-o to open the message thread, press cmd-shift-up arrow
to stop interacting with the top message, then VO-right once to have VO read
the next message, VO-right again for the next , VO-left for
Hello Ramy,
First, I suggest that you use the Standard view in Mail as opposed to the
Classic view.
Assuming this is your setup, then, when you interact with the message table,
land on a collapsed message thread, you only need to open the thread with the
right arrow key, then use the up and do
If you interact with the list of your messages with vo+shift+down arrow, you
can then put your voiceover cursor in the sender column or subject column and
move up and down the entries in the column you have chosen to be in.
> On 26 Feb 2017, at 18:12, Ramy Moustafa wrote:
>
> Hello all:
>
> Am