Why don't you just go to the n y home page and bypass the e-mail with the
links

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Rhonda Clark
Sent: Friday, July 15, 2005 04:30
To: Braillenote List
Subject: re: [Braillenote] Is There an Easier Way?

Kathy, you've got it.  I don't know of an easier way.

> ----- Original Message -----
>From: Kathy Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: Braillenote List <[email protected]
>Date: Thu, 14 Jul 2005 21:43:21 -0700
>Subject: [Braillenote] Is There an Easier Way?

>I think I've found a way to work around my New York Times problem of
copying g email addresses for each article in the email abstracts to the
Internet address edit box.  I'd appreciate it if someone who knows things
well like Rhonda or someone equally well versed, if you'd check my logic and
see if there's a better way to do this.

>OK When I get the New York Times email i just set the block marks at the
top and bottom of the mail, then Function-S to the Keyword and put the whole
message in a file there to keep open.  I read ndown and find the first email
address I want and just block move it to the clipboard from the keyword
document.

>Then I eithr Function-0 or function-s if I've forgotten the 0 to get to the
Internet page I last read, hit escape once and I"m in the keyweb edit window
for the URL which I paste with CTRL-V then I hit ENTER and listen to that
article.

>When I'm done with it I tobble back to the keyword open file and find the
next url I want to visit and again block copy it to the clipboard, toggle
back to the keyweb internet page and go back to give the new url either with
esc or with ctrl-o and

>again use ctrl-v to enter my new URL and ENTER to go there and read.

>This keeps me from having to reopen the email message time and time again
because it doesn't stay open when I toggle away from email.

>Is this reasonable or am I missing something else really easy and obvious

>As I listened to this before I sent it, I noticed that although it would
read each word separately correctly, when it read as a whole it read any
occurrance of the letter "g" as a hard "g" sound like thin g That's odd.

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