Hi all,

Stanley, I think you're probably right about this, and therefore, in
order to protect its customers, Humanware should, in future, place
these tiny labels into something larger so that they can be correctly
identified and more easily stored and the license sticker can be
properly affixed to the machines.  Perhaps Microsoft might be willing
to absorb some of the cost of packaging for this all-important license
sticker???  After all, it's they who have started the chain of events
which culminated in Theresa's problems this morning.    Again, it is
important to remember who your market is and the limitations which are
faced by us.  If a sighted person was dealing with this same issue, he
or she might drop the sticker on the floor, but would be able to
retrieve it.  He or she might be able see the sticker in the plastic
bag and not throw out the bag until it was examined thoroughly.  He or
she might lose the sticker, but to ask a person who is blind to pay an
additional licensing fee, in effect to pay for his/her disability, is
unfair, I think.  It is particularly unfair when a paper trail exists
to prove that payment and shipping of an upgrade has occurred.  

Ann P.

-- 
                        Ann K. Parsons  
email:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]                       
WEB SITE:  http://home.eznet.net/~akp
Skype:  Putertutor
"All that is gold does not glitter.  
Not all those who wander are lost."  JRRT


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