Well, I'm glad that you've all come to your senses. Though respectfully Josh, Apple ran out of viable excuses, even those made up by it's supporters a long, LONG time ago.
-----Original Message----- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Josh de Lioncourt Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2007 6:11 PM To: General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by the blind Subject: Re: Accessibility of Itunes Hi Cheryl, As many of you remember, probably, I've been a huge advocate for giving Apple plenty of time to get iTunes updated to the current standards that Apple has developed themselves in terms of accessibility. My patience, too, is running a bit thin. They've not made any firm stance on this in years. I think it may be time for a coordinated campaign to try to make Apple more contious of the importance of this to many of us. So, yes, I agree. They are rapidly running out of excuses. Cheryl Homiak wrote: > my issue isn't with finding other apps to play my files. My biggest > issue is that I can't even use the iTunes store, not to subscribe to > podcasts that have to go through the iTunes store, not to buy from > radio365 or rhapsody (I can assure you not one of those over 2 billion > songs purchased through iTunes was purchased by me but not for lack of > effort!!). ITunes is a major part of Apple, as Steve illustrated in > the Keynote message; iTunes is also a big part of Macosx and a big > part of today's ipod scene. After nearly two years of voiceover, I'm > no longer sympathetic to the idea that poor apple has to maintain two > versions of iTunes and therefore can't/won't make it accessible to > those of us using the Mac. > >
