we were not.
On Mar 13, 2008, at 8:05 PM, Cara Quinn wrote:
This may be more a question for Greg, but has it really been shown
that no blind people were consulted in these sorts of tests /
processes? I.E. creation / testing of VO and other access related SW?…
If that IS the case, why not put together some sort of group
petition of interested testers.
I personally have contacted Apple about this very thing, and they
said they'd keep me in mind when next looking for testers, but perhaps
a group approach might be in order?
-Any thoughts?…
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Mar 13, 2008, at 11:55 AM, william lomas wrote:
hi the word complement means goes hand in hand with so how can they
get out of this one?
it should read everything but it doesn't shows yet again that
unfortunately no blind people were consulted so i want to see how
they get out of this one
will
On 13 Mar 2008, at 16:56, David Poehlman wrote:
"which nicely complements VoiceOver"
does not mean works with as I warned you when the release was posted.
----- Original Message -----
From: "william lomas" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac
OS X by
theblind" <discuss@macvisionaries.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 13, 2008 12:06 PM
Subject: furhter to my mail on mac speech dictate
hi i found this on the press release of mac speech dictate, so from
this i would expect complete complance with mac speech to work with
voice over
"Apple's commitment to accessibility is evident throughout Mac OS X,
including such ground-breaking features as VoiceOver, our built-in
screen reader," said Ron Okamoto, Apple's vice president of Worldwide
Developer Relations. "We're delighted that Mac OS X users now have
access to advanced speech-to-text dictation technology from
MacSpeech,
which nicely complements VoiceOver.
---
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