Neat!

Cheers!

Michele

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alex Parks
Sent: Saturday, 16 September 2006 6:56 AM
To: Braillenote List
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Converter Explanation


Yes, you can open any HTML file on any drive. At the address 
prompt, press BACKSPACE just like at any other file name prompt. 
Once you have selected the drive and folder, press SPACE+X to 
view all text, HTML, and braille files in that folder. Select the 
book and press ENTER, and (though it may take a while, it will 
load. The problem is that you cannot keep your place if you have 
to exit or reset.

Have a great day,
Alex
P.S. I want to go to college for computer programming and want 
nothing more than to work for HW. I love KeySoft and would not 
want to work for a company such as FS (their products definitely 
leave something to be desired.

> ----- Original Message -----
>From: "Michele Thredgold" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: "'Braillenote List'" <[email protected]
>Date sent: Sat, 16 Sep 2006 06:31:08 +0930
>Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Converter Explanation

>Dear Alex

>When you finish your studies, you should apply for a job at
HumanWare.

>I am wanting to ask you, if you save an html book on a compact 
flash
>card, can you still open it in keyweb?  From what I remember, I 
don't
>think this is possible, but thought I'd check.  It would be good 
if you
>could, because then, one would not have to convert html books to 
text
>all the time and they would not take up so much room on the flash 
disk.
>Having a BN Classic, I've got to economize my disk space and am
>currently having to continuously translate html files into text.

>Cheers!

>Michele

>-----Original Message-----
>From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Alex 
Parks
>Sent: Saturday, 16 September 2006 5:41 AM
>To: [email protected]
>Subject: [Braillenote] Converter Explanation


>I have seen some speculation on this whole converter thing, so I
>will explain how this little project of mine came to be. If you
>do not feel like reading the whole thing, just know that it was
>done completely and totally on my BN, and using the converter
>service does NOT require a connection to the internet at all.

>I already knew HTML this summer, and in August I was bored. I
>looked online and downloaded some books from BookShare, and
>taught myself the basics of JavaScript. I realized that, using
>JavaScript's ability to have the web browser perform
>calculations, I could theoretically convert metric to English and
>back. I set about writing the HTML file and getting the format
>down, then wrote the JS file that contains the instructions for
>the web browser to calculate.

>These files were created by creating an ASCII text file, but
>instead of just typing the name and hitting ENTER, I typed the
>name followed by a .html or .js extension. Because the file was
>just a text file, it accepted the extension fine. This is how I
>create all my HTML files. BTW: the HTML file has a line of
>instructions in it that tells the browser where to find the
>JavaScript code to execute upon the user's request (in this case
>that code is in the converter.js file). So basically, the button
>you click to convert a measurement refers to a specific
>"function" (think of a function as a miniature program). A bunch
>of these functions are inside the converter.js file, and the web
>browser knows to look there because of the reference in the HTML
>file (the same HTML file that holds the buttons that ask for the
>function to be executed).

>If anyone has additional questions, email me at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>and we can talk. Sorry if I just confused you and made you vow
>never to touch a programming tool, ever! It really is easier than
>I made it sound, but I do not know how else to explain it.
>Have a great day,
>Alex

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