dear List;
I have a laptop. My engineer has turned off wi fi of the same. I request you to mention shortcut keys to turn on the same. I must share that it is not turned on with function key plus f3. So the suggestion can be some other.
With thannks,

----- Original Message ----- From: <accessindia-requ...@accessindia.org.in>
To: <accessindia@accessindia.org.in>
Sent: Saturday, January 22, 2011 1:40 PM
Subject: AccessIndia Digest, Vol 56, Issue 73


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Today's Topics:

  1. Search Engines (Thanislas)
  2. thai airways (Jean Parker)
  3. Search Engines (vincent thanislas)
  4. Re: Information about Asisstive technological aids available
     for visually challenged people in their education is needed
     (mahesh bhagwat)
  5. problems in ms word (karan yourdestiny)
  6. Talks and nokia X5 (girishsethi2...@gmail.com)
  7. Re: problems in ms word (Kartik Sawhney)
  8. Re: Search Engines (namdeo2000)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 11:49:37 +0530
From: "Thanislas" <vtvint...@gmail.com>
To: <accessindia@accessindia.org.in>
Cc: bs...@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [AI] Search Engines
Message-ID: <4d3a771d.0ae9640a.36d8.7...@mx.google.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Hi list Member!



           Just  FYI.






Using Search Engines to Find Information on the Web




Search Engines



Search engines on the World Wide Web are remotely accessible programs that
let you do keyword searches for information on the Internet. There are
several

types of search engines and searches may cover titles of documents, URL's,
headers, or full text. Keep in mind that the results you get from one search

engine may not match the results you get from another search engine. In
fact, they are often different due to the way each search engine behaves.
Therefore,

it may actually be beneficial to use more than one search engine on a
regular basis.



In this section, we will briefly look at Google and Yahoo. Web pages are
often dynamic and can change at any time. As a result, you may find that if
either

site changes, your experience with JAWS may be different than what is
described.



Google.com



When you first go to the

Google Web site

there is a blinking cursor in an edit box where you can type the word or
phrase that you are interested in. The first thing you need to do is press
the

ENTER key to go into Forms Mode with JAWS. Once you are in Forms Mode, you
can then type in keywords that will define your search. After you have typed

in some text, press ENTER to activate the Search button.



Google only returns Web pages that contain all of the words in your query.
If you find that you get too many "hits" or Web pages that match your
search,

you can enter more words in your search query to narrow the choices.



Using good keywords gives you better results. Be as specific as you can. For
example, a search for the keyword "musicians" will yield far more results
than

a search for the keywords "Elvis Presley." You do not need to include "and" between terms, but the order in which you type your keywords will affect the

search results. You can also search for a specific phrase by including words
in quotation marks. Google searches are not case sensitive.



You can also use the following items within your keywords for Google
searches:



. + (plus) sign. Causes Google to include common words or characters that
Google normally might ignore, such as "where" and "how." If a common word is
important

in getting the results you want, you can include it by putting a "+" sign in
front of it. (Be sure to include a space before the "+" sign.)

. - (minus) sign. Causes Google to exclude a word from your search. For
example, "bass" can refer to fishing or music. You can exclude music-related
hits

by searching for "bass -music." (Be sure to include a space before the minus
sign.)

. ~ (tilde) sign. Causes Google to include synonyms of a particular keyword
in the search.

. OR searches are also supported. Use an uppercase OR between terms.



The I'm Feeling LuckyT button takes you directly to the first Web page
Google returned for your query. You will not see the other search results at
all.

For example, to find the home page for Stanford University, simply enter
"Stanford" into the search box and choose the I'm Feeling LuckyT button.
Google

takes you directly to www.stanford.edu, the official home page of Stanford
University.



To find listings for a US residence, type any of the following combinations
into the Google search box:



. first name (or first initial), last name, city (state is optional)

. first name (or first initial), last name, state

. first name (or first initial), last name, area code

. first name (or first initial), last name, zip code

. phone number, including area code

. last name, city, state

. last name, zip code



Try a search for Freedom Scientific.

Use this link to go to the Google Web site.

On the results page, there are a couple of things you can do to get more
information about the results of the search:



. The statistics of your search are typically placed between the search edit
box and the search results. You can press DOWN ARROW a few times to find
this

line or you can use the JAWS find command CTRL+F to look for the words
"Personalized Results" and then read that line. For example, when testing
this the

search found "Personalized Results 1 - 10 of about 37,700,000 for Freedom
Scientific. (0.11 seconds)." This can be useful if you need to narrow the
search.

. The items found as a result of your search are placed on the page as both links and headings. You can press the navigation quick key H to move quickly

among the headings that match your search. Since they are also links, you
can press ENTER to activate them and move to those Web pages of interest.

. Below each heading (and link) that match your search is a short synopsis
of what that page is about. After pressing H to move to a heading (link)
just

press DOWN ARROW to read the text below it for more information.

. Remember, you can also press SHIFT+H to move backwards.



You can also read through the search results page using normal reading keys
or use INSERT+F7 to open the list of links and see what related links were
found.

Use the Move to Link button in the links list (ALT+M) to move to a
particular link and then down arrow through the associated text to find out
if this

might be what you are looking for.



Each hit is also followed by a "Cached" link. Google's cache is a snapshot
of the page taken as it crawls the Web. Cached pages may have changed since
they

were first captured.



There is also a link below each hit called "Similar Pages" that may yield
more results. In addition to the information displayed on the initial
results

page, there are often links to more pages of information that meet your
search criteria. These pages are reached by activating the link for the
number

of the page. Usually you will find links for additional pages 2 through 10
near the bottom of each page.



Yahoo.com



Yahoo is another search engine that many people use. The main Yahoo page
also has more information on it, such as sports and news headlines,
entertainment

links, and links to many other items. This tends to cause the page to appear
more cluttered than the Google site, but may prove itself useful to you as

well. As with Google, when you first go to the

Yahoo Web site

there is a blinking cursor in an edit box. Turn on Forms Mode in JAWS by
pressing ENTER and type in your keywords. Then press ENTER to begin the
search.



Yahoo behaves very much the same way as Google, and displays a list of ten
hits per page of matching items. These are links to further resources, and
each

link here also has a text description taken from that source that matches
your query.



After a Yahoo results page loads, press the letter H to move to the heading "Search Results" and press DOWN ARROW to the next line to find the results.

You should hear something like the following: "Results 1 - 10 of about
2,860,000 for Freedom Scientific. Search took 0.11 seconds."



The results do not show up currently as headings, but are links with text
between them that describe each link. Press INSERT+F7 to use the list of
links

to explore the links or you can also press TAB to move from one link to
another. Each main link contains a short text synopsis below it and a few
other

links such as:



. Cached

. More from this site

list end



Yahoo also has links to other results pages, just as Google does. These
links show as numbers 2 through 10 and are located near the bottom of the
page.





Thanks for your patience in reading out this article.



With Regards

v.thanislas







------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 11:58:24 +0530
From: "Jean Parker" <radiofore...@gmail.com>
To: <accessindia@accessindia.org.in>
Subject: [AI] thai airways
Message-ID: <DB891F8D21864D7DB15869EA16267E8F@jean1ca8e1ee6b>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

Hi:

Anyone have recent experience with Thai Airways? I have heard that in the past they have exhibited bad behavior to blind people but don't know if there have been recent adjustments.

Jean


------------------------------

Message: 3
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 12:35:08 +0530
From: vincent thanislas <vtvint...@gmail.com>
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: [AI] Search Engines
Message-ID:
<aanlktik9tfzylv9k2ijzuyrisc82rrhjfamuuuywq...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8

Hi list Member!

           Just  FYI.


Using Search Engines to Find Information on the Web

Search Engines

Search engines on the World Wide Web are remotely accessible programs
that let you do keyword searches for information on the Internet.
There are several
types of search engines and searches may cover titles of documents,
URL's, headers, or full text. Keep in mind that the results you get
from one search
engine may not match the results you get from another search engine.
In fact, they are often different due to the way each search engine
behaves. Therefore,
it may actually be beneficial to use more than one search engine on a
regular basis.

In this section, we will briefly look at Google and Yahoo. Web pages
are often dynamic and can change at any time. As a result, you may
find that if either
site changes, your experience with JAWS may be different than what is described.

Google.com

When you first go to the
Google Web site
there is a blinking cursor in an edit box where you can type the word
or phrase that you are interested in. The first thing you need to do
is press the
ENTER key to go into Forms Mode with JAWS. Once you are in Forms Mode,
you can then type in keywords that will define your search. After you
have typed
in some text, press ENTER to activate the Search button.

Google only returns Web pages that contain all of the words in your
query. If you find that you get too many "hits" or Web pages that
match your search,
you can enter more words in your search query to narrow the choices.

Using good keywords gives you better results. Be as specific as you
can. For example, a search for the keyword "musicians" will yield far
more results than
a search for the keywords "Elvis Presley." You do not need to include
"and" between terms, but the order in which you type your keywords
will affect the
search results. You can also search for a specific phrase by including
words in quotation marks. Google searches are not case sensitive.

You can also use the following items within your keywords for Google searches:

? + (plus) sign. Causes Google to include common words or characters
that Google normally might ignore, such as "where" and "how." If a
common word is important
in getting the results you want, you can include it by putting a "+"
sign in front of it. (Be sure to include a space before the "+" sign.)
? - (minus) sign. Causes Google to exclude a word from your search.
For example, "bass" can refer to fishing or music. You can exclude
music-related hits
by searching for "bass -music." (Be sure to include a space before the
minus sign.)
? ~ (tilde) sign. Causes Google to include synonyms of a particular
keyword in the search.
? OR searches are also supported. Use an uppercase OR between terms.

The I'm Feeling Lucky? button takes you directly to the first Web page
Google returned for your query. You will not see the other search
results at all.
For example, to find the home page for Stanford University, simply
enter "Stanford" into the search box and choose the I'm Feeling Lucky?
button. Google
takes you directly to www.stanford.edu, the official home page of
Stanford University.

To find listings for a US residence, type any of the following
combinations into the Google search box:

? first name (or first initial), last name, city (state is optional)
? first name (or first initial), last name, state
? first name (or first initial), last name, area code
? first name (or first initial), last name, zip code
? phone number, including area code
? last name, city, state
? last name, zip code

Try a search for Freedom Scientific.
Use this link to go to the Google Web site.
On the results page, there are a couple of things you can do to get
more information about the results of the search:

? The statistics of your search are typically placed between the
search edit box and the search results. You can press DOWN ARROW a few
times to find this
line or you can use the JAWS find command CTRL+F to look for the words
"Personalized Results" and then read that line. For example, when
testing this the
search found "Personalized Results 1 - 10 of about 37,700,000 for
Freedom Scientific. (0.11 seconds)." This can be useful if you need to
narrow the search.
? The items found as a result of your search are placed on the page as
both links and headings. You can press the navigation quick key H to
move quickly
among the headings that match your search. Since they are also links,
you can press ENTER to activate them and move to those Web pages of
interest.
? Below each heading (and link) that match your search is a short
synopsis of what that page is about. After pressing H to move to a
heading (link) just
press DOWN ARROW to read the text below it for more information.
? Remember, you can also press SHIFT+H to move backwards.

You can also read through the search results page using normal reading
keys or use INSERT+F7 to open the list of links and see what related
links were found.
Use the Move to Link button in the links list (ALT+M) to move to a
particular link and then down arrow through the associated text to
find out if this
might be what you are looking for.

Each hit is also followed by a "Cached" link. Google's cache is a
snapshot of the page taken as it crawls the Web. Cached pages may have
changed since they
were first captured.

There is also a link below each hit called "Similar Pages" that may
yield more results. In addition to the information displayed on the
initial results
page, there are often links to more pages of information that meet
your search criteria. These pages are reached by activating the link
for the number
of the page. Usually you will find links for additional pages 2
through 10 near the bottom of each page.

Yahoo.com

Yahoo is another search engine that many people use. The main Yahoo
page also has more information on it, such as sports and news
headlines, entertainment
links, and links to many other items. This tends to cause the page to
appear more cluttered than the Google site, but may prove itself
useful to you as
well. As with Google, when you first go to the
Yahoo Web site
there is a blinking cursor in an edit box. Turn on Forms Mode in JAWS
by pressing ENTER and type in your keywords. Then press ENTER to begin
the search.

Yahoo behaves very much the same way as Google, and displays a list of
ten hits per page of matching items. These are links to further
resources, and each
link here also has a text description taken from that source that
matches your query.

After a Yahoo results page loads, press the letter H to move to the
heading "Search Results" and press DOWN ARROW to the next line to find
the results.
You should hear something like the following: "Results 1 - 10 of about
2,860,000 for Freedom Scientific. Search took 0.11 seconds."

The results do not show up currently as headings, but are links with
text between them that describe each link. Press INSERT+F7 to use the
list of links
to explore the links or you can also press TAB to move from one link
to another. Each main link contains a short text synopsis below it and
a few other
links such as:

? Cached
? More from this site
list end

Yahoo also has links to other results pages, just as Google does.
These links show as numbers 2 through 10 and are located near the
bottom of the page.


Thanks for your patience in reading out this article.



V.Thanislas
My Mobile : 9940316967
E-Mail ID : vtvint...@gmail.com
MSN address : vin_t...@hotmail.com

Life is more painless for those who are brainless.



------------------------------

Message: 4
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 18:16:25 +1100
From: mahesh bhagwat <maheshbhagwa...@gmail.com>
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: Re: [AI] Information about Asisstive technological aids
available for visually challenged people in their education is needed
Message-ID:
<aanlktinzfkcdf8rujodb_kjfqok+bxeajuo67gvrg...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

vijayji, following websites are very resourcceful for you, 1.
www.nabdelhi.org 2. www.eyeway.org  3. www.inclusiveplanate.com with
best wishes, Mahesh Bhagwat.

On 1/22/11, VIJAY KUMAR P.V.S. <vijay.palakod...@gmail.com> wrote:
Respected members:



As subject line suggests, I would like to seek your valuable suggestions
with regard to two things, which play a prominent role in my research
studies. 1. What are the assistive technological devices available for
visually challenged persons which are useful at various levels and various
subjects in their education?



2. Are there any technological aids, which will be helpful in dealing with
diagrams and maps in our studies?



Please help me with your valuable information.



Thank you very much in advance

With warm regards

VIJAY




------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 13:02:05 +0530
From: karan yourdestiny <thekarandancingd...@gmail.com>
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: [AI] problems in ms word
Message-ID:
<AANLkTinfChaU2CctYBTQDGgQQ=brfezywj+67sjta...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

hi friends!
as a part of my b.com hons sillabus, we have to make use of various
options of view menu like drawing, word art, clip art, use of eraser
to erase lines of table etc. it is almost impossible for me to cop-up
with these opptions, how can i combat this problem?
help is awaited.\
regards
karan singhania
mob:78387 61223



------------------------------

Message: 6
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 07:53:05 +0000
From: "girishsethi2...@gmail.com" <girishsethi2...@gmail.com>
To: "accessindia@accessindia.org.in" <accessindia@accessindia.org.in>
Subject: [AI] Talks and nokia X5
Message-ID: <4d3a8ce4.9352d80a.3d98.0...@mx.google.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"

Hello friends,



latest addition of talks not fully supporting nokia x5 dispite same mentioned on nuance web site,the major problem: talks doesn't recognise symbols as .,: etc while pressing talks key located at left side of space bar, while writing mails, messages, and bit probllem while opening sms in inbox, send items. There r certain other bugs. Pls share ur experiences. Regards, girish sethi.



------------------------------

Message: 7
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 13:23:49 +0530
From: Kartik Sawhney <sawhney.kar...@gmail.com>
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Subject: Re: [AI] problems in ms word
Message-ID:
<aanlktimdtbbskjhvv-4ogxizlx_bydktrglbq5pjg...@mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

Hi Karan,

See as far as these things are concerned, we can just use them, but
cannot make any changes/edit. For instance, we can insert pictures
through clipart, and use word art options with JAWS. Simply select the
text, and simply apply the desired word art option. Similar provisions
can work out with other features that you've talked about as well. You
may write in for more help.

Hope this helps.
Regards,
-Kartik

On 1/22/11, karan yourdestiny <thekarandancingd...@gmail.com> wrote:
hi friends!
as a part of my b.com hons sillabus, we have to make use of various
options of view menu like drawing, word art, clip art, use of eraser
to erase lines of table etc. it is almost impossible for me to cop-up
with these opptions, how can i combat this problem?
help is awaited.\
regards
karan singhania
mob:78387 61223





------------------------------

Message: 8
Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 12:59:46 +0530
From: "namdeo2000" <jadhav.nam...@gmail.com>
To: <accessindia@accessindia.org.in>
Subject: Re: [AI] Search Engines
Message-ID: <000901cbba0b$d6d263b0$0701a8c0@jadhavpc>
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
reply-type=original

Very informative indee.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Thanislas" <vtvint...@gmail.com>
To: <accessindia@accessindia.org.in>
Cc: <bs...@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 22, 2011 11:49 AM
Subject: [AI] Search Engines


Hi list Member!



           Just  FYI.






Using Search Engines to Find Information on the Web




Search Engines



Search engines on the World Wide Web are remotely accessible programs that
let you do keyword searches for information on the Internet. There are
several

types of search engines and searches may cover titles of documents, URL's,
headers, or full text. Keep in mind that the results you get from one
search

engine may not match the results you get from another search engine. In
fact, they are often different due to the way each search engine behaves.
Therefore,

it may actually be beneficial to use more than one search engine on a
regular basis.



In this section, we will briefly look at Google and Yahoo. Web pages are
often dynamic and can change at any time. As a result, you may find that
if
either

site changes, your experience with JAWS may be different than what is
described.



Google.com



When you first go to the

Google Web site

there is a blinking cursor in an edit box where you can type the word or
phrase that you are interested in. The first thing you need to do is press
the

ENTER key to go into Forms Mode with JAWS. Once you are in Forms Mode, you
can then type in keywords that will define your search. After you have
typed

in some text, press ENTER to activate the Search button.



Google only returns Web pages that contain all of the words in your query.
If you find that you get too many "hits" or Web pages that match your
search,

you can enter more words in your search query to narrow the choices.



Using good keywords gives you better results. Be as specific as you can.
For
example, a search for the keyword "musicians" will yield far more results
than

a search for the keywords "Elvis Presley." You do not need to include
"and"
between terms, but the order in which you type your keywords will affect
the

search results. You can also search for a specific phrase by including
words
in quotation marks. Google searches are not case sensitive.



You can also use the following items within your keywords for Google
searches:



. + (plus) sign. Causes Google to include common words or characters that
Google normally might ignore, such as "where" and "how." If a common word
is
important

in getting the results you want, you can include it by putting a "+" sign
in
front of it. (Be sure to include a space before the "+" sign.)

. - (minus) sign. Causes Google to exclude a word from your search. For
example, "bass" can refer to fishing or music. You can exclude
music-related
hits

by searching for "bass -music." (Be sure to include a space before the
minus
sign.)

. ~ (tilde) sign. Causes Google to include synonyms of a particular
keyword
in the search.

. OR searches are also supported. Use an uppercase OR between terms.



The I'm Feeling LuckyT button takes you directly to the first Web page
Google returned for your query. You will not see the other search results
at
all.

For example, to find the home page for Stanford University, simply enter
"Stanford" into the search box and choose the I'm Feeling LuckyT button.
Google

takes you directly to www.stanford.edu, the official home page of Stanford
University.



To find listings for a US residence, type any of the following
combinations
into the Google search box:



. first name (or first initial), last name, city (state is optional)

. first name (or first initial), last name, state

. first name (or first initial), last name, area code

. first name (or first initial), last name, zip code

. phone number, including area code

. last name, city, state

. last name, zip code



Try a search for Freedom Scientific.

Use this link to go to the Google Web site.

On the results page, there are a couple of things you can do to get more
information about the results of the search:



. The statistics of your search are typically placed between the search
edit
box and the search results. You can press DOWN ARROW a few times to find
this

line or you can use the JAWS find command CTRL+F to look for the words
"Personalized Results" and then read that line. For example, when testing
this the

search found "Personalized Results 1 - 10 of about 37,700,000 for Freedom
Scientific. (0.11 seconds)." This can be useful if you need to narrow the
search.

. The items found as a result of your search are placed on the page as
both
links and headings. You can press the navigation quick key H to move
quickly

among the headings that match your search. Since they are also links, you
can press ENTER to activate them and move to those Web pages of interest.

. Below each heading (and link) that match your search is a short synopsis
of what that page is about. After pressing H to move to a heading (link)
just

press DOWN ARROW to read the text below it for more information.

. Remember, you can also press SHIFT+H to move backwards.



You can also read through the search results page using normal reading
keys
or use INSERT+F7 to open the list of links and see what related links were
found.

Use the Move to Link button in the links list (ALT+M) to move to a
particular link and then down arrow through the associated text to find
out
if this

might be what you are looking for.



Each hit is also followed by a "Cached" link. Google's cache is a snapshot
of the page taken as it crawls the Web. Cached pages may have changed
since
they

were first captured.



There is also a link below each hit called "Similar Pages" that may yield
more results. In addition to the information displayed on the initial
results

page, there are often links to more pages of information that meet your
search criteria. These pages are reached by activating the link for the
number

of the page. Usually you will find links for additional pages 2 through 10
near the bottom of each page.



Yahoo.com



Yahoo is another search engine that many people use. The main Yahoo page
also has more information on it, such as sports and news headlines,
entertainment

links, and links to many other items. This tends to cause the page to
appear
more cluttered than the Google site, but may prove itself useful to you as

well. As with Google, when you first go to the

Yahoo Web site

there is a blinking cursor in an edit box. Turn on Forms Mode in JAWS by
pressing ENTER and type in your keywords. Then press ENTER to begin the
search.



Yahoo behaves very much the same way as Google, and displays a list of ten hits per page of matching items. These are links to further resources, and
each

link here also has a text description taken from that source that matches
your query.



After a Yahoo results page loads, press the letter H to move to the
heading
"Search Results" and press DOWN ARROW to the next line to find the
results.

You should hear something like the following: "Results 1 - 10 of about
2,860,000 for Freedom Scientific. Search took 0.11 seconds."



The results do not show up currently as headings, but are links with text
between them that describe each link. Press INSERT+F7 to use the list of
links

to explore the links or you can also press TAB to move from one link to
another. Each main link contains a short text synopsis below it and a few
other

links such as:



. Cached

. More from this site

list end



Yahoo also has links to other results pages, just as Google does. These
links show as numbers 2 through 10 and are located near the bottom of the
page.





Thanks for your patience in reading out this article.



With Regards

v.thanislas










End of AccessIndia Digest, Vol 56, Issue 73
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