Hi Geoff.
In your message you say that you've unchecked a box in the Voice Over Utilities
category, so wish to know (as I read my messages in threaded view which are
displayed as separate windows), if I were to uncheck the box and pressed enter
on any message, would the Voice Over read my messa
I would go ahead and install skype, it works well, though the interface is a
bit cluttered in the newest version. There are 2 ways apps are installed. For
the most part, apps come as a disk image, this has a .dmg extension, be sure to
enable the showing of file extensions in finder preferences.
Hi Shameless,
Can't improve on Jes's excellent description of app installation, but in terms
of pulling an email address from a header, there are other ways to skin the
cat. In fact I seldom interact with anything in e-mail. Instead, I went into
vo utility (VO-f8) -> navigation and unchecked
You are all fantastic, I cannot express that enough, and indeed, those
instructions were absolute perfection. :) Spent today playing with Safari a
little more, downloaded and installed Skype, and have played around the app
store a bit. Thanks for your patient instruction; this is what ma
Hi Jes:
See, no need for a podcast. It's all right here.:)
On May 5, 2011, at 4:24 AM, Jes Smith wrote:
> You are giving me ideas for upcoming podcasts.
> To install an app:
> 1. Open the .dmg file with command-O. (Most apps come in dmg files, which are
> basically virtual cds.) However, If t
If you download apps from the Apple App Store, the apps are automatically
installed into your Applications folder. To get an email address from the
header, interact with the message header, press option + shift, and use the
arrow keys, this will let you move by word and select the word at the s
What excellent instructions. I'm going to keep your instructions for myself.
Thanks.
Kawal.
Sent from my iPhone
On 5 May 2011, at 11:24 AM, Jes Smith wrote:
> You are giving me ideas for upcoming podcasts.
> To install an app:
> 1. Open the .dmg file with command-O. (Most apps come in dmg f
You are giving me ideas for upcoming podcasts.
To install an app:
1. Open the .dmg file with command-O. (Most apps come in dmg files, which are
basically virtual cds.) However, If the app comes with the extension .pkg,
that's just like the setup.exe file that you've seen a billion times in
Wind