Thanks, Andrea. I haven't customized anything in the program, but I did
have to change some file associations after installing the other day. It
doesn't appear that those have been reversed with the new profile.
John
On 11/15/2014 1:57 AM, Andrea Pescetti wrote:
John W. wrote:
I've been abl
This follows up on my earlier inquiry about the message I was getting
every time I tried to start Open Office, which referred to a document
recovery failure. It came about as a result of a crash, and the error
reporting feature apparently doesn't work. In doing a little research, I
found that i
t size on your screen, till it's big enough for you to see.
Sorry I can't help with your other issue. I assume you have already
made certain you are using Apache OpenOffice, and not another
application with a similar name?
marina
[message also sent to kc0...@centurytel.net (John W. S
I've checked in before with screen reader accessibility questions, and
the problem that has popped up is aggravated by that. I have a little
usable vision, which enables me to do only limited tasks with Open Office.
Last night I opened a document in Writer. Since I couldn't read it with
my scr
Thanks, guys. Very interesting. I have NVDA, but I'm not crazy about
using it much. I can hardly keep track of Window-Eyes commands, let
alone learning those of another screen reader. Does System Access work
with Open Office.
The whole problem started when I accidentally deleted Office Starter
en
I'm in Writer. When I type text, Window-Eyes does not read it back. Does
the version I'm using make a difference? I'm using the latest, which I
think is 4.1.1.
John
On 11/13/2014 7:29 AM, Brian Barker wrote:
At 06:39 13/11/2014 -0600, John W. Smith wrote:
I'm new to t
I'm new to the list, having installed Open Office last evening. I was
told Open Office would be accessible to Window-Eyes, the screen reader I
use. That doesn't seem to be the case for me so far. Is there a set of
steps I need to take to activate accessibility? If so, please elaborate.
John