Perhaps a direct link from the Mac Visionaries site and some high profile mentioning. It would be cool if Apple's accessibility area of there site could have links direct to such third party developers who go above and beyond, but that's my own humble pondering.

Take Care

John D. Panarese
Managing Director
Technologies for the Visually Impaired, Inc.
9 Nolan Court
Hauppauge, NY 11788
Tel/Fax, (631) 724-4479
Email, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Internet, http://www.tvi-web.com

AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTORS FOR PORTSET SYSTEMS LTD, COMPSOLUTIONS VA, PREMIER ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGIES, INDEX, PAPENMEIER, REPRO-TRONICS, DUXBURY, SEROTEK AND OTHER PRODUCTS FOR THE BLIND AND VISUALLY IMPAIRED

AUTHORIZED APPLE BUSINESS AGENT
MAC VOICEOVER TRAINING


On May 8, 2007, at 12:50 PM, Patrick Neazer wrote:

Good morning Greg and all:

Here is a silly question.

Let me start by saying I agree with Greg. we should give this guy some kind of prize.

Here is my question. what kind of prize?

If anyone is still reading this here is my point. the prize idea ... which does not necessarily have to mean money ... is a great idea. there has to be a way to reward and recognize people who actually take into consideration the programming needs and wants of the consumer who uses this list. there is a considerable amount of time spent, and rightly so, pointing out when an application falls short. this could be an opportunity for the list to think about a way to say good job to someone who might be encouraged to do it again.

I imagine someone is thinking that just sending emails is enough though I am proposing something a tad more personal and something that could be seen by others. maybe the annual macvisionaries plack or a photo album of list members sort of giving the users a face. I hope someone has better ideas than me (smile)

Just my two cents and my apologies for agreeing with Greg in public. hopefully you will not judge him to harshly given the people who read his mail (smile). this idea is not his fault (smile). Hopefully he will forgive me as well (smile).

Take good care and I wish you enough.


On May 7, 2007, at 9:40 PM, Greg Kearney wrote:

We should give this guy some kind of prize. This is about the most accessible application from a third party I've seen even has VO help. No footnotes or endnotes that I can find but everything else is there even a non-visual way to set tab stops! It get a 5 for sure just added to to the database.

Greg


On May 7, 2007, at 20:21 , Dan Keys wrote:

It sure is. Thanks.
Dan

On May 7, 2007, at 6:49 PM, Esther wrote:

Could this be the link to bean?

Web page: http://www.bean-osx.com/Bean.html

discussed at:
http://osx.iusethis.com/app/bean

Looks as though you can't change fonts.

Cheers,

Esther

On Monday, May 07, 2007, "yvonne thomson" wrote:
Hi all.

this is just a quick note. While flicking through macupdate this
morning, I ran across bean.

there's been lots of talk around here about word processing, so I
grabbed it, even though I don't really have much use for such a program.

The news looks good. First, it's free and appears to come with source
code. Second, it looks, on a very brief inspection at least, as
though it's accessible. At least, most of the toolbar buttons could
be read and the text entry area can be seen and edited and so on,
which is usually the hassle with these sorts of apps.

It's got word counts and character counts and such. I'm not really
sure what else it can do. As I said, I don't have much interest and I don't have a lot of time at the moment for fiddling. Anyway, have a
look for it on macupdate, I also can't immediately find the link
<hits self on head>. I'm interested to see whether those of you who
use these sorts of apps think it's useful.









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