1. My company has used that address to ask questions on several occasions to field a project for the school district and never got a single response. Also they sent letters via certified mail to no avail. I personally took on the responsibility to purchase a Mac and report my results. What no one new was that when I was asking the rudimentary questions that were so called annoying to the list I was bashed. I have called and went to my local store and found out that they don't know hoot about VO or how to use it. Please don't make it seem like you call Apple and the rep tells you to do anything with VO because he isn't trained to assist with VO issues. They too, however can tell you that they are not trained to help in these matters.
On Nov 8, 2007, at 9:44 PM, Cara Quinn wrote:

 If you haven't asked a question, then what would they respond to?...

RE: calling, have you tried calling Apple Care?...

I say this not to be sarcastic, but I believe that the accessibility email address is for questions / concerns so I'm betting that the people who monitor it really do so in a utilitarian sort of way. As far as phone tech support, I'd simply try giving a call if I need something that I can't find anywhere else and see what happens?...

Have a wonderful evening!...

Smiles,

Cara  :)


On Nov 8, 2007, at 4:53 PM, VaShaun Jones wrote:

I never gotten responses either. I have never asked them a question, I just told them on numerous occasions that they are doing a great job. Why can't we call and get screen reader help would be my question. If we call support and don't know how to use VO then who do we turn to? We should be able to call and get support for VO just like someone gets help for I Tunes.
On Nov 8, 2007, at 5:16 PM, Dan Keys wrote:

Hello Rich and list,
I'd like to make an obxervation regarding my experiences with Apple's Accessibility Group.
Never in the numerous times that I've written to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
have I ever got a response. It would be better for someone to respond to email, than to never respond. I know that a few people have received replies from Apple's Accessibility group, but I sure never have. It kind of gives the appearance that they don't want anything to do with the customers who use Apple's products, in particular, VoiceOver or any other accessibility applications.




On Nov 8, 2007, at 1:53 PM, Rich Caloggero wrote:

I want to file a bug / suggestion with Apple, specifically related to
Safari, VoiceOver, and Webkit. Should I simply send eMail to
[EMAIL PROTECTED], or should I goto the webkit.org site and use their
bug tracking system?

I guess what I'm really asking is: which software is controling the behavior I see with respect to VoiceOver and the web (Safari, Webkit, or VoiceOver)? I assume that there is no simple answer to this question, and that to some
extent all three are involved.

A related question: if I send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], are there guidelines or a certain form the message must follow, aside from the usual: include specific version numbers of all components, provide test cases, be clear about what the problem is, and provide clear steps to reproduce?

Thanx much in advance.

-- Rich












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