Here is another thing to think about. I have found that I can make certain non-VoiceOver accessible application to be accessible by editing the user interfaces with the interface builder. I could produce an installer that would look for installed versions of such program and install the new modified parts of the program. I have one for Skype for example

I have been reluctant to release any such installer as I am unsure about the legal issue involved in releasing modified versions of parts of programming this way.

Greg Kearney


On Apr 12, 2007, at 8:02 PM, Access Curmudgeon wrote:

While it seems to be the case that you can not buy a copy of the
Intel version of MacOSX

That is all I was trying to point out.

that will  change when 10.5 is release

Yes!

you will be able to in October.

I am already waiting for the Core 2 Duo Mini, and I time my purchases
to coincide with OS X releases, this works fine for me.  Christmas '08
will be good for Apple, but are they not missing half a year of easy
pickings?

The other issue is that the licenses are only as good as the laws
that support them.

Actually, Iam quite skeptical of "shrink wrap" and/or "click through"
licenses.  I feel like if I buy software, it is mine to own and do as
I please.  The idea that the vendor has more rights than me, and that
I am buying a license rather than code is offensive.  But I can
articulate the vendors perspective, and do no like to see things
misrepresented, especially to a mostly naive audience.



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