Hi, In that case, these two commands are used for different contexts. Cheers, Joseaph
-----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Nusbaum Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2012 1:00 PM To: 'Marvin'; 'BN List' Subject: RE: [Braillenote] Hidden Command Hi Marvin, Space with z also works on the BrailleSense. Chris -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marvin Sent: Wednesday, August 08, 2012 3:49 PM To: BN List Subject: [Braillenote] Hidden Command I'm not sure why HW got lazy on this one, but space with z (z-chord) is a Blazie Notetaker command for exitting stuff, like the file command menu. That command should be switchable along with the b-chord command for backspace through compatibility mode. Speaking of modes, I have another idea for a new keysoft release. Has anyone on here used a Blazie notetaker in the past, as I have? If so, you might remember macros. I absolutely LOVED those things! You'd hit n-chord, (we'd have to change this to something like space with dots 2 4 6 because space with n is find next occurrence of string) a braille symbol you wanted the macro sequence to be under, then you'd be able to record up to sixty-three consecutive keypresses (two of which could possibly be the command sequence for calling another macro), then the recording would end. Of course, you could always end the recording earlier by hitting n-chord again. Let's say you wanted macro e to do a pronunciation dictionary switch so you could change from Keynote Gold over to Eloquence speech, and have that other dictionary load so kng's pronunciations wouldn't mess up eloquence speech. That macro might go as follows: Space with dots 2 4 6. Bn says: "Enter a character", so you decide e for "eloquence switch". After pressing e, the bn might say: recording. You could then go through the command sequences for doing this: Go to main menu (all dots-chord) f for file manager, d for directory, f for the flash disk, space for the folders list, d for the dictionaries folder, enter to select, p for pronunciation dictionary Then backspace with m for move file, f for the flash disk as destination drive, the word none for the folder, enter. Now you'd be back in the file list for the dictionaries folder, so e for the file "eloquence pronunciation dictionary", backspace with r for rename, then dot 5-chord twice to get to the word "pronunciation", then backspace with dot 2 for delete previous word, then enter to finish renameing. We're still only at 21 keypresses for this macro, so we're still good! So, go to main menu again, backspace with enter with r for review voice, space four times to the synth choice, then e for eloquence, and finally e-chord to exit. We could now hit space with dots 2 4 6 again to end recording keys, and the bn would say: "macro end". This new macro only took 29 steps. Now macro e would be ready to use. All we'd have to do whenever we wanted to switch to the eloquence synthesizer from now on would be to hit something like enter with j (remember space with j is already jump to place marker) for execute macro, at which point the bn might prompt "macro to run?". So we'd hit e, and the bn would do all that stuff for us in something like less than two or three seconds, and eloquence would be loaded when all was done. Incidentally, a couple things could be added to this. First, you might remember that k-chord and v-chord were the commands for silence and speak macros respectively. This would turn speech off or on respectively while a macro was running. Silencing the voice would speed things up since the unit wouldn't be speaking the prompts and stuff while things were happening. So if we implemented those commands, we'd have to use enter instead of the spacebar, since enter with k and v are still available to us. Also, a Nemeth 8-chord was the command to have a macro speak a message (or just braille it, if macro execution was silenced before the message sequence). This command possibility is still available to us, so we wouldn't have to use enter for this one. So, using our previous example, enter with k before the start of the recording, and enter with v after exitting review voice would bring the recording to 31 characters. We still have enough room to have the macro speak a message, so we could still add this: Space with dots 2 3 6 (speak and/or display a message), then the string of text (without quotes) "eloquence loaded" before hitting space with dots 2 4 6 to end recording. This new and improved macro is still only 48 keypresses. I don't remember, but I think you had to hit space with e (Blazie enter) to end a message, so that would bring the macro to 49 characters. So here's what would happen after hitting enter with j, then e. You'd see the braille display do some very quick refreshes, then a slight freeze after the macro hits space with e to exit the review voice menu while eloquence loads, then you'd probably see eloquence loaded on your display, as well as hear it spoken. This is why I think macros would be a great idea to bring back! They would make procedures like this one much easier! Sorry for the long message, but I felt nostalgic about macros, and figured I'd tantalize you with this new possibility. Oh, and before I forget, if we created this macro, we'd need to create a reverse macro (maybe k for keynote gold) which would silence speech, go to the dictionaries folder, rename "pronunciation dictionary" to "eloquence pronunciation dictionary", find "pronunciation dictionary" in the none folder, move it back to dictionaries, exit file manager, review voice, switch back to keynote gold, exit, turn speech back on, then display the message "keynote gold loaded". My brain hurts from counting the steps in that other macro, so I'm not going to count this other hypothetical recording sequence. I think it would fit within sixty-three characters if things were done efficiently, though. If not, we could easily not put in the message sequence. Anyway, have a good day. ___ Replies to this message will go directly to the sender. If your reply would be useful to the list, please send a copy to the list as well. To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to [email protected] To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit http://list.humanware.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote ___ Replies to this message will go directly to the sender. If your reply would be useful to the list, please send a copy to the list as well. To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to [email protected] To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit http://list.humanware.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote ___ Replies to this message will go directly to the sender. If your reply would be useful to the list, please send a copy to the list as well. To leave the BrailleNote list, send a blank message to [email protected] To view the list archives or change your preferences, visit http://list.humanware.com/mailman/listinfo/braillenote
