Hi Anne,
Thanks very much for this advice. I'll try this.
Speak soon - hopefully on Skype over Xmas.
TC
James
On 15 Dec 2009, at 08:14, Anne Robertson wrote:
> Hello James,
>
> To read articles on the Web, I switch to DOM mode using a keyboard commander
> hot key I've created. I then use the
Hello James,
To read articles on the Web, I switch to DOM mode using a keyboard commander
hot key I've created. I then use the Web Rotor to select the level 1 heading
with which most articles begin. I use VO-a to read the article.
In general, I prefer Group mode, but when reading articles, grou
Cool I'll try that thanks.
TC
James
On 14 Dec 2009, at 22:47, carlene knight wrote:
> Maybe the VO navigation reads it differently. Come to think of it, I had a
> bunch of graphics or something in an article a while back so I stopped
> reading text that way. I had forgotten about that. I us
Maybe the VO navigation reads it differently. Come to think of it, I had a
bunch of graphics or something in an article a while back so I stopped reading
text that way. I had forgotten about that. I use the item chooser if I know
the subject of the article that I want to read an once I get to
Thanks Carlene,
TC
James
On 14 Dec 2009, at 21:53, carlene knight wrote:
> What I do when I hear clickable and I might be interested is to click the
> mouse button with numbed 5 if you have the numbed commander on or
> Vo/shift/space if not. That seems to work the best.
>
>
> On Dec 14, 20
Hi Carlene,
No, I didn't use VO A to rea the article, I used the VO navigation to read it.
Thank you for all of your help. I am a long time Mac user, but have only
recently come back to the Mac.
TC
James
On 14 Dec 2009, at 21:06, carlene knight wrote:
> Hi James;
>
> I didn't encounter them i
What I do when I hear clickable and I might be interested is to click the mouse
button with numbed 5 if you have the numbed commander on or Vo/shift/space if
not. That seems to work the best.
On Dec 14, 2009, at 1:36 PM, Nicolai Svendsen wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Yeah, that's the interesting part.
>
Hi,
Yeah, that's the interesting part.
Regards,
Nic
Skype: Kvalme
MSN Messenger: nico...@home3.gvdnet.dk
AIM: cincinster
yahoo Messenger: cin368
Facebook Profile
My Twitter
On Dec 14, 2009, at 9:05 PM, James & Nash wrote:
> Hi Nic,
>
> Generally, these instances of "clickable" do not seem to
Hi James;
I didn't encounter them in the article itself, but the page is full of them.
Did you use VO/a to read the article once you got to it? That's what I did. I
wonder if somehow your display is set differently so that you are seeing all of
those clickable objects that might be at the en
Hi Nic,
Generally, these instances of "clickable" do not seem to be "clickable" in
fact lol.
TC
James
On 14 Dec 2009, at 20:02, Nicolai Svendsen wrote:
> HI,
>
> I see that a lot of the time on news pages. Danish ones in particular, really.
>
> Regards,
> Nic
> Skype: Kvalme
> MSN Messenger
HI,
I see that a lot of the time on news pages. Danish ones in particular, really.
Regards,
Nic
Skype: Kvalme
MSN Messenger: nico...@home3.gvdnet.dk
AIM: cincinster
yahoo Messenger: cin368
Facebook Profile
My Twitter
On Dec 14, 2009, at 8:50 PM, carlene knight wrote:
> What's the URL? Now you'
Hi carlene,
You can pick any news story on the BBC site, but here is the article I was
reading. I would be curious to see if you get the same results as I did.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8411318.stm
Thanks for your help
TC
James
On 14 Dec 2009, at 19:50, carlene knight wrote:
>
What's the URL? Now you've got me curious.
On Dec 14, 2009, at 11:45 AM, James & Nash wrote:
> Hi carlene
>
> Thanks so much for your reply. This makes sense, but i don't think that every
> line on a BBC news article would have a link attached to it would it? I will
> go back and check.
>
> T
Hi carlene
Thanks so much for your reply. This makes sense, but i don't think that every
line on a BBC news article would have a link attached to it would it? I will go
back and check.
Thanks again
TC
James
On 14 Dec 2009, at 19:31, carlene knight wrote:
> Hi James;
>
> Usually when that ha
Hi James;
Usually when that happens it is informing you that there is a link or button
you can click on for more information about the particular subject of that line
you just read. For instance if you were reading newspaper article about an
ongoing news story, you might see this when referenc
Hi list,
Is there some reason why Voice Over says "clickable" after reading every line
in an article on the internet? Is there some way of turning it off or is it
informing me of some information that I am unaware of?
Thanks
TC
James
--
You received this message because you are subscribe
16 matches
Mail list logo