That would be in Mail preferences.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
"Those who make peaceful revolution impossible
will make violent revolution inevitable."
--John F. Kennedy
My e-Mail:
ancient.ali...@icloud.com
On 10/17/2022 12:56 PM, Lorie McCloud wrote:
I’m looking for the place where I can set how
Try this support article.
Have you set up your phone already?
https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204184
-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com On
Behalf Of Lorie McCloud
Sent: Thursday, January 20, 2022 10:46 PM
To: via MacVisionaries
Subject: Re: more questions about
I don't care how long it takes. where do I go to choose iCloud backup?
> On Jan 20, 2022, at 6:54 PM, Rebecca Skipper wrote:
>
> When you signed in did you enable iCloud backup or did you decide to download
> your data manually?
> iCloud backup takes a while.
> You could always ask Siri to open
When you signed in did you enable iCloud backup or did you decide to download
your data manually?
iCloud backup takes a while.
You could always ask Siri to open the app store and double tap the My Account
under the today tab.
Then, you could download the apps you wanted.
However, if you are downl
well, I'm going to experiment with them anyway. I'll leave them there and just
paste them somewhere else. that way if they don't play in the new location I
haven't lost anything. I've found the iPhone app for podcasts a lot easier to
use than the Mac app but I like to listen to audio drama on bi
The way to do this is to use the go menu and then select go to folder item.
Quickest way:
vo-M followed by G return g return
or type command-shift-g in Finder
This will bring up a dialog where you can enter a path. Or you could use
terminal
cd
ls will list files / folders
file will try to
I wonder if the files will play if you move them? Not sure - I would just use
the app to listen to podcasts online and offline -
Come and See
scripturepassage-subscr...@groups.io
> On Mar 21, 2021, at 11:01 PM, Lorie McCloud wrote:
>
> what I'll probably do is copy them out of there and paste
I'm not sure. I would not mess with it myself as Apple puts these files away
because we are to use the app to listen while online and offline and use the
app to remove the download etc but if I were going to try to find these files,
I would put that long URL type configuration into a finder sea
what I'll probably do is copy them out of there and paste them somewhere else.
that way they'll still be in there. I don't know how to get in there though. is
there a place where you can copy this path for the computer to go there? I
don't know how to do that.
> On Mar 21, 2021, at 4:34 PM, Pat
where do you go to get there? I mean, how do you start out? is it in iTunes
media or somewhere else? I looked in my users folder and just found a couple of
folders.
> On Mar 21, 2021, at 4:34 PM, Patrick Ford wrote:
>
> ok you won't believe this but this is where your podcasts are stored:
> ~/
ok you won't believe this but this is where your podcasts are stored:
~/Library/Group Containers/243LU875E5.groups.com.apple.podcasts
crazy, right? no one is actually supposed to go in here and get a podcast - if
you find this path you can drag it out but I wouldn't mess with it - strange
for a
found out I can't download them again. the option has disappeared. now it says:
"remove" instead so it thinks they're in there somewhere. I looked in
"downloads" in iTunes media but nothing's there.
> On Mar 21, 2021, at 6:02 AM, Patrick Ford wrote:
>
> There is something called 'user library'
There is something called 'user library' and they could have landed there - if
I find where this is I will forward this information - you have a good idea
though - download again just to see if they did go in the media library
Come and See
scripturepassage-subscr...@groups.io
> On Mar 20, 2021
ok. well I looked there so maybe they didn't download like they were supposed
to.
> On Mar 20, 2021, at 5:38 PM, Patrick Ford wrote:
>
> they should be in the same place which I think is called under music, then
> iTUnes media folder under download podcast folder
> Come and See
> scripturepa
they should be in the same place which I think is called under music, then
iTUnes media folder under download podcast folder
Come and See
scripturepassage-subscr...@groups.io
> On Mar 20, 2021, at 5:42 PM, Lorie McCloud wrote:
>
> do downloaded podcasts go to the same place in the Mac that th
As far as the VPN software being resource hogs, no not really with the
following caveat. Your network will be slower because everything is being
redirected through a host out on the network somewhere. So it adds steps on to
your packet’s trip. What you lose in performance you gain in encrypti
No, Express VPN and several other services like it are designed to encrypt and
lock down all communication so that when you are at a coffee shop or other
public wireless hotspot your communications with the network can't be tampered
with. If you consider the internet a set of pipes (Scott will
Hi!
There is a native alva driver for nvda.
You might try that before brltty.
/A
25 jun 2014 kl. 01:13 skrev Jason White :
> Gabriele Battaglia wrote:
>> Doesn't any body know if BRLTTY works also to support Alva Satellite 540?
>
> I think all of the Alva displays are supported. If you're experi
Gabriele Battaglia wrote:
> Hi Jason and thanks for your kind answer.
It's my pleasure.
> I didn't know there is a BRLTTY support mailing list, I'm going to googling
> for it.
>
Google should take you to http://mielke.cc/mailman/listinfo/brltty
> Before leaving you, I'd like to ask you somethin
Hi Jason and thanks for your kind answer.
I didn't know there is a BRLTTY support mailing list, I'm going to googling
for it.
Before leaving you, I'd like to ask you something else as you're an
experienced Linux user.
Do you know if there are important differences in between the Unix system
Gabriele Battaglia wrote:
> Doesn't any body know if BRLTTY works also to support Alva Satellite 540?
I think all of the Alva displays are supported. If you're experiencing
difficulties, the helpful people on the BRLTTY mailing list should be able to
assist.
> I'm trying to use it with NVDA on a
Hi!
I never got brltty to work on my mac.
So i gave it up and do an ssh from my linux box to my mac instead.
/A
24 jun 2014 kl. 10:02 skrev Jason White :
> Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
>> Yep! Braille for me, but only with BRLTTY, and only at the command line in
>> text mode. That is the compl
Doesn't any body know if BRLTTY works also to support Alva Satellite 540?
I'm trying to use it with NVDA on a Win 8.0 Virtualized with VmWare Fusion,
under my iMac, but it seems not working at all.
Thanks for every info.
Gabriel.
--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the
Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
> I haven't tried it since Leopard, so I couldn't say, however the driver
> interface meant that it was extremely limited anyway. I have since taken to
> the song and dance of configuring VMWare to pass through my USB braille
> device (BrailleNote Apex) to a Linux VM
I have used the focus display a little bit, but the braille edge is the one I'm
getting if I get one. I want to be able to store books on it.
The hand-copied thermaform braille is torture. I had to read a book for school
once with it, and I litterally had to ask for an extension on the final
a
On 24 Jun 2014, at 09:02, Jason White wrote:
> Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
>> Yep! Braille for me, but only with BRLTTY, and only at the command line in
>> text mode. That is the complete braille experience, IMO.
>
> Indeed it is. Does BRLTTY still run on OS X? It used to work - I remember
Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
> Yep! Braille for me, but only with BRLTTY, and only at the command line in
> text mode. That is the complete braille experience, IMO.
Indeed it is. Does BRLTTY still run on OS X? It used to work - I remember
it was discussed on the BRLTTY mailing list more than
Yep! Braille for me, but only with BRLTTY, and only at the command line in
text mode. That is the complete braille experience, IMO. At all other times,
it's essentially required that you have speech, which is really no good for
anything except reading numbers over the phone.
And peace and qu
erik burggraaf wrote:
> When I first wen back to braille on receiving a braille display, my fingers
> got very irritated. I actually went to some braille proofers and asked if I
> was likely to lose sensitivity by reading too much. After they reassured me
> I went nuts. My fingers never actua
I find personally that since I've been using a braille display, reading
one line at a time versus an entire page of braille. Not only does it
not make my hands and fingers as tired, but also my arms and shoulders.
Also, I love the cursor routing keys if I am doing extensive text editing.
--
Yo
I know that braille displays made braille accessible to me in a way that
revitalized my interest in using it. I found a single line at a time much less
daunting than a 5 or 10 volume bralle book. As for thermoform... Don't get me
started, especially in the muggy south west ontario summer.
Whe
I wonder if reading on a display will improve my speed reading braille. I would
think the more I read the better I will get. With paper braille my fingers get
all irritated. I have always had to stop reading for a few days if I read a lot
because my fingers would be painful and red with broken s
Hi all. I don't know if I've posted about this or not, but I use braille
displays at school and love it. During the summer though, we don't have the
braille displays. I use it for reading books on BARD, and when I just want some
quietness away from speech. We use refreshabrailles, which from exp
Hi Alia,
Braille is slower but more accurate. For example, I had to double check the
spelling of your name just now. Using speech this took far longer finding an
instance of the name then arrowing through the letters. It would have been
instantaneous if I were reading your emails with braill
Hi!
As someone mentioned braille is not well implemented in Voiceover.
I have tried and tried to mail the accessibility mail adress about this.
I really hope we will get better braille support.
Especially navigating without having the speech hanging around all the time.
I use linux on my pc and bra
Hello Gabriele,
I haven't tried this, but it might be worth setting a Hotspot at the point
where you break off.
Cheers,
Anne
On 22 Jun 2014, at 12:10, Gabriele Battaglia
wrote:
> Hi Anne, morning and thanks for your replay.
>
> Before having the iPhone, I was used to read books under Wind
Hi Anne, morning and thanks for your replay.
Before having the iPhone, I was used to read books under Windows on my desktop
computer and I felt confortable with Word. When I have to stop reading, from
the Insert menu, I dropped down a bookmark in the text and, the next time I
wish to continue,
Hello Gabriele,
The translating I do is mostly tourist brochures and documents relating to
exhibitions, all coming through an agency, so I haven't been faced with this
problem. Could you send me an example off list so that I can have a look at
what you're talking about?
Cheers,
Anne
On 21 J
I never had a refreshable braille display until I was well into
college. Now, I don't know what I ever did without it. I am on my best
experience with a braille display currently, a 32-cell Brailliant BI
display from HumanWare. It has by far been the easiest display to use,
and has the perkins
Ok Anne, thanks.
If you are working on a large document that requires more than one work section
to be translated, how did you solved the bookmark problem?
Can you use bookmarks on pages?
Thanks.
Gabriel.
Il giorno 21/giu/2014, alle ore 22:43, Anne Robertson ha
scritto:
> Hello Gabriele,
>
>
Hello Gabriele,
I use Pages when translating from DOC or DOCX and the online dictionary I use
is Word Reference. I don't use any translating tools as I think they give poor
results.
By the way, I've been using Pages since iWork09 came out and miss some of the
features that used to be available
High-end,
I forgot to mention that I enjoy using braille when running GPS apps on my
iPhone. It's really nice to have access to a braille display during those times.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Jun 21, 2014, at 3:05 PM, Anne Robertson wrote:
>
> I use a Braille display with my Mac when I'm doing
Hi Anne,
just my curiosity: which kind of editor are you using while translating and, do
you maybe use also some accessible dictionaries, what?
Thanks a lot.
If you feel your answer could goes off topic, you may sent it privately of
course.
Gabriel.
Il giorno 21/giu/2014, alle ore 21:05, Anne
I use a Braille display with my Mac when I'm doing a translation as it saves a
lot of time I would otherwise spend checking spellings of names and verifying
punctuation and text attributes. I've also just got a Focus 14 Blue 8 days ago
and I'm now enjoying reading books with it on my iPhone. I j
I can not do without a braille display. For one thing, I can't remember
telephone numbers so having information at my fingertips as it were really
helps. I am a Braille transcriber and use Braille displays on a daily basis for
work and for home. Whilst Braille is not great on the Mac, It's great
Hi Alia,
My frame of reference on this is that while I have read braille for well over
50 years, when speech came along, I used that without braille for quite some
time. I view braille as a supplement to speech. I also believe that reading
braille on paper is not the same as reading on a brai
I am still waiting/hoping voiceover will enable auto-scroll. the one I'm
looking at has storage capabilities though.
I don't travel much, so carrying around something isn't an issue for me. thanks
for all the discussion.
Alia
On Jun 21, 2014, at 10:14 AM, Teresa Cochran wrote:
> I read lot
I read lots of books with my Braille display using Kindle, iBooks, and Bard. I
only read audio books when I can't get them in Braille or I don't want to pay.
(or can't pay). I'm such a Braille fanatic that I use my Focus 40 Blue with my
iPod. I was never sure I wanted to scroll a whole bunch wit
I do too, although I am liking audio more lately with the bard app. I just
don't know about having an expensive specialized piece of equipment. I am so
torn, and I know voiceover isn't supporting braille as much as they do the
audio part of voiceover.
Alia
On Jun 21, 2014, at 7:55 AM, Teresa C
I much prefer Braille for reading over audio. And now, hearing loss has made
Braille even more important for me. I wish displays didn't have so many moving
parts, but since they do, and Braille is very important to me, the hassle is
worth it. Using Braille with OS X and iOS is different from Win
-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jenine Stanley
Sent: Thursday, February 20, 2014 6:00 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: more questions about audio editing software
I'd grabbed Amadeus Lite to see what it was lik
I'd grabbed Amadeus Lite to see what it was like and I think I need the Pro
version to perform some of the things Mike shows in his podcast. They didn't
quite work on my version of Amadeus Lite.
I'm still looking for anyone using MicroWave. I've written to the developer
asking about keyboard c
Hi all,
It's been a crazy day, sorry for not responding.
thanks all for the suggestions. Sounds like Amadeus Pro is the way to go, I'll
definitely download it and give it a try. And thanks also for the podcast
suggestions, I'll check those out as well.
Cheers,
Donna
On Feb 20, 2014, at 9:52 A
Mike,
It was a great podcast and very helpful. Looking forward to more.
Jenine Stanley
dragonwalke...@gmail.com
On Feb 20, 2014, at 3:59 PM, Mike wrote:
> Sorry Daniel. I just posted this email again. I guess I should read entire
> thread before I respond.
> My bad guys.
>
> Mike Malarsie
Mike,
LOL! I did not know you were in here. Good to hear from you again! Yeah, I
thought your podcast was really good, but my hearing is just not good enough to
do video editing.
Daniel Hawkins
- Posted from my Macbook Pro
iPhone 4S, 16GB, Jailbroken IOS 7.0.4
iPad 2nd Gen, 32gb
iPhone 3gs 8gb,
Sorry Daniel. I just posted this email again. I guess I should read entire
thread before I respond.
My bad guys.
Mike Malarsie
www.malarsie.com
> On Feb 20, 2014, at 10:02 AM, Daniel Hawkins
> wrote:
>
> also check out www.htb2.com, he have a podcast on that too.
> Daniel Hawkins
> - Posted
Hi there,
I also made it a tutorial that you can check out at the link below. Let me know
if you have any
questions.http://htb2.com/2013/10/to-the-point-4-audio-editing-in-amadeus-pro/
Mike Malarsie
www.malarsie.com
> On Feb 20, 2014, at 9:54 AM, Jenine Stanley wrote:
>
> Are there any tuto
also check out www.htb2.com, he have a podcast on that too.
Daniel Hawkins
- Posted from my Macbook Pro
iPhone 4S, 16GB, Jailbroken IOS 7.0.4
iPad 2nd Gen, 32gb
iPhone 3gs 8gb, as media player
2012 15in. Macbook Pro
2.3 Quad-core i7, Turbo to 3.3Ghz
4GB Dual Channel DDR3
500GB HDD
Dual Boot:
Wind
Yes if you go to www.applevis.com there are podcasts about
adameus pro.On Feb 20, 2014, at 9:54 AM, Jenine Stanley
wrote:
> Are there any tutorials for Amadeus out there? I really wasn't getting a lot
> from the manual regarding keyboard support.
>
> I'm a long-time Sound Forge user so that
Are there any tutorials for Amadeus out there? I really wasn't getting a lot
from the manual regarding keyboard support.
I'm a long-time Sound Forge user so that colors my experience quite a bit. :)
Jenine Stanley
dragonwalke...@gmail.com
On Feb 20, 2014, at 10:52 AM, Ray Foret Jr wrote:
>
For me, nothing beats Amadeus Pro for keyboard accessibility.
Sent from my Mac, the only computer with full accessibility for the blind
built-in!
Sincerely,
The Constantly Barefooted Ray, still a very happy Mac and Iphone 5 user!
On Feb 20, 2014, at 9:34 AM, Jenine Stanley wrote:
> Regarding
Oooops, I forgot to add. Someone here told you how to get rid of
columns in your e-mail table that you may not want. However,
sometimes I still do not want voiceover to announce every cell in a
row. So, what I do is interact with the table. Once the voice over
cursor is focused on the t
Hi,
I'm not sure if you're using vo plus j to get to your e-mail message
or just opening the e-mail with the enter key or vo plus spacebar.
Well, either way, once you are in the area where voiceover is reading
the entire message to you you need to then interact with the message.
Just mak
2009 5:07 PM
Subject: Re: more questions
>
> Hi May,
>
> The advice I gave holds true in either Leopard or Snow Leopard.
>
> HTH,
> Anna
>
>
> >
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Go
Hi May,
The advice I gave holds true in either Leopard or Snow Leopard.
HTH,
Anna
--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"MacVisionaries" group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googleg
Smile, I don't have sl.
May, now using my MacBook
- Original Message -
From: "Woody Anna Dresner"
To:
Sent: Thursday, September 10, 2009 2:13 PM
Subject: Re: more questions
>
> Hi May,
>
> In the View menu, you can eliminate columns you don't care ab
Hi May,
In the View menu, you can eliminate columns you don't care about, such
as the Buddy one. As for reading line by line, you can often arrow up
and down using Snow Leopard, but for more precise control, you may
need to interact with the text using VO-Down Arrow or, if Quick Nav is
on
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