I think it's always a good idea to send this sort of thing to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
as they really do need to understand these sorts of issues first-
hand in order to more effectively improve VO. I was just about to do
this myself, so I'd say go for it!… -Great minds… lol!
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Aug 11, 2008, at 7:59 PM, UCLA Bruins Fan wrote:
Thank you as always, Ester! You are such a valuable contributer to
this list!
I am wondering whether it is worth sending an accessibility note to
apple regarding this feature of Itunes?
Thoughts?
Olivia
On Aug 11, 2008, at 5:04 PM, Esther wrote:
Hi Olivia, Scott, Cara, and Others,
The only accessible way I've found to search for iTunes U content
at the iTunes Store is to bookmark a link to their Power Search
options:
itms://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZSearch.woa/wa/advancedSearch?institutionTerm=&media=iTunesU
If you activate that link in a web browser you are taken to the
power search page at the iTunes Store, and even though it says
"dimmed image", you can tab into the search fields and type queries
to run a search, provided you know that the tab field entries are
for Title, Description, and Institution.
So, for example, if I use that as a bookmark, or copy the address,
and paste it into the Safari address bar (Command-L to go to
address bar; Command-V to paste) and then carriage return, my
iTunes application comes up with the iTunes Store in the Source
list and pointed to the Power Search Page for iTunes U. I have
iTunes open already and just Command-tab to switch from Safari to
iTunes.
1. In iTunes, position yourself at the Search Text field. (You can
tab to it, or type Option-Command-F to go there directly).
2. Press tab. You'll hear "iTunes Store, dimmed image".
3. The next three tabs will take you to the text fields for Title,
Description, and Institution. You can type (or paste in) text for
any of these fields, but you won't hear VoiceOver speak. To search
for iTunes U content on history, for example, I could press tab
twice (first tab takes me to "Title", which I leave blank; second
tab takes me to "Description"), type in "history" without the
quotation marks, and then press carriage return. If I wanted to
find content with "history" in its description from a particular
Institution, I could have pressed tab a third time, then typed
"Arizona", for example, before pressing carriage return.
4. After you launch your search with carriage return, tab to the
Songs Outline to check the results. You can VO-keys right arrow to
read descriptions of the programs titles, content, etc. and press
the "Get" button the same way you press "Free" to get your podcasts
(e.g., route your mouse cursor to the VoiceOver cursor and use VO-
space).
You can launch multiple searches by tabbing back to the power
search window. Just remember that whatever you've typed before is
still there, but you won't hear VoiceOver speak, so delete your
previous search terms before you run a new search.
HTH. The easiest way to run this is to find a University web page
which has its own links to iTunes U, but you'd have to look all
over the web. But that's how I broke down the search syntax.
Cheers,
Esther
On Aug 11, 2008, at 1:08 PM, Cara Quinn wrote:
Hey there, I was wondering about this too! Honestly, I'm not sure
how we'd get at it though, as I believe it's in the area of the
ITunes store we can't view with VO?…
I haven't tried just typing in ITunes U or ITunes University or
some such lecture title into the search field yet though, so it's
certainly possible.
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Aug 11, 2008, at 9:47 AM, UCLA Bruins Fan wrote:
Hi Everyone,
A friend told me about a new feature available in Itunes called
Itunes University. Basically, the idea is that you can download
free lectures from colleges and universities and listen to them
on a computer or ipod.
I am wondering whether anyone has tried this and how well, if at
all, it works with VO?
Thanks, Olivia
---
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View my Online Portfolio at:
http://www.onemodelplace.com/CaraQuinn