Hi,
I don't use numpad commander at all.
Thanks for listening,
Alex,
On 25-Oct-08, at 6:04 PM, Esther wrote:
Hi Louie,
I might try an external numpad, but I'm actually a relatively recent
Leopard user and got this MacBook maybe less than 2 months ago. Hey,
at least I have a Firewire port! <smile>. Anyway, most of what I
know about Numpad Commander is from reading the literature and the
list posts, not from experience using it. Thanks for the suggestion.
Cheers,
Esther
On Oct 25, 2008, at 2:50 PM, louie wrote:
OK for you who have a laptop why not get a external numpad? I use
the numpad commander all of the time. Not sure that I could operate
the Mac with out it. Just a thought.
On Oct 25, 2008, at 5:09 PM, Esther wrote:
Hi Randy and Jacob,
The situation with the new laptops without the numeric keypad
option (on MacBooks these are the models manufactured after
November 2007) is slightly weirder, but basically Jacob is
correct. The slightly weird part comes about because laptops also
support a Universal Access menu feature called "Mouse Keys" that
lets folks who have mobility problems move the position of their
mouse cursor using the numeric keypad keys. When you reference the
central key or "5" in a numeric keypad for the position of the
mouse cursor, pressing the key above it ("2") will move the mouse
cursor up one screen pixel unit, pressing the key below it ("8")
will move the mouse cursor down one screen pixel unit, and
similarly for left ("4") and right ("6") motion. You could also
move diagonally (up and to the left with "1", up and to the right
with "3", etc.)
On the older laptops, there were two ways you could use the
numeric keypad keys with Mouse Keys activated: You could either
first toggle on the numeric keypad by pressing the Numlock (F6)
key. That turned the right hand side of your laptop into a numeric
keypad, so "7-8-9" mapped to the same numbers on the numeric
keypad, "u-i-o" mapped to "4-5-6", and "j-k-l" mapped to "1-2-3".
(All this would be announced correctly in VoiceOver and you could
use keyboard practice mode to check the keys; you also got the
plus, minus, 0, comma, period, and other numpad keys adjacent to
these.) Alternatively, you could press the Fn key in combination
with the Numpad letter keys to get the equivalent Numpad functions
without toggling the Numlock key on: Fn+u, Fn+i, and Fn+o was like
pressing "4-5-6" on a numeric keypad. The "I" key was the center
of the numeric keypad, and corresponded to "5".
Even though Apple removed the Numlock key in the later model
laptops, they still had to support users who needed to use Mouse
Keys to position their cursor. So if you turn Mouse Keys on in
the Universal Access menu under System Preferences, part of your
keyboard works to allow you to move the cursor around, and
pressing Fn+u will move your mouse one screen pixel to the left,
Fn+8 will move your mouse one pixel up, Fn+k moves one pixel down,
and Fn+o moves one pixel right. (I don't really think about this
-- the center key is the "i" key and I just press Fn plus the key
to the left, right, up, or down from the "i" key to move the
cursor in that direction).
As a bonus, when you have Mouse Keys turned on, Fn+i acts like a
hardware click --- just as though you had Numpad Commander turned
on and were pressing the "5" key on a numerica keypad.
So you might wonder whether you can get some of the other Numpad
Commander keys working if you turn Mouse Keys on and enable Numpad
Commander in the VoiceOver preferences. Apple advises you not to
do this in their VoiceOver guide for Leopard. What happens is
that you get the Numpad Commander functions for the partial
numeric keypad that Mouse Keys gives you, but then you can't use
your Command key. Bit of a bummer.
Just FYI. And the reason for using Mouse Keys at all here, is
that there are some instances where Flash doesn't disclose web
page elements to VoiceOver, but where, if you can get there with
your mouse, you can click and access content. As an example, the
sound samples for the (U.S.) Audible.com audiobooks are embedded
flash, but you can play the sound samples on the page if you use
Mouse Keys (or other means) to navigate to the samples. See the
Mac-cessibility quick tip about this at lioncourt.com:
http://www.lioncourt.com/2008/07/19/play-samples-on-audiblecom-with-voiceover/
Cheers,
Esther
On Oct 25, 2008, at 11:50 AM, Randy Stegall wrote:
Ah, I knew there was a reason I did not care for those
keyboards. :)
Randy
On Oct 25, 2008, at 5:45 PM, Jacob Schmude wrote:
If you've got a keyboard with a numpad or an older laptop with
the numpad overlay that is. The past few generations of laptops
as well as the new wireless keyboards lack any sort of numpad
support whatsoever.
On Oct 25, 2008, at 14:42, Randy Stegall wrote:
Using numpad commander numpad plus interacts and numpad minus
stops interacting. Thus there only 2 keys to remember. :)
Hth,
Randy
On Oct 25, 2008, at 4:23 PM, Estelita wrote:
Yeah, if we remember how to do it.
As myself, I always look at my notes when I work on my Mac.
However: I admired the developers' idea by integrating voice
in the Mac, it gives us choice.
----- Original Message ----- From: "David Poehlman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of
Mac OS Xby theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, October 25, 2008 8:04 PM
Subject: Re: Apple Seeds Mac OS X 10.5.6 to Developers
Speaking from a pure design standpoint as a point of fact,
the vo interface
is a brilliant design. if you have trouble with
control-option-shift-down/up arrow, you can most often use
tab and shift tab
and arrows to do many things, you can also use the item
chooser in many
windows. Interacting is brilliant because it provides a way
of interacting
with tthings instead of them getting in the way when you
don't need or want
them.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Estelita" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of
Mac OS Xby
theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Saturday, October 25, 2008 2:57 PM
Subject: Re: Apple Seeds Mac OS X 10.5.6 to Developers
I think not only the vo find feature needs refining, there
are more features
that need lots of twigging before we land to where we want.
Personally, I don't really like this interacting command.
We have to remember 4 keys to do this.
Since voiceover is just new, we just hope the developers will
come up with
the key combinations that are easy to remember.
----- Original Message ----- From: "kaare dehard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of
Mac OS X by
theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2008 4:12 PM
Subject: Re: Apple Seeds Mac OS X 10.5.6 to Developers
I for one would like to see some touchups done to the vo
find feature,
It's good as far as it goes, I have found that on larger
busier pages it
is somewhat inconsistant as to what and when it will find
something. I
don't see why one day it will find something and behave,
but on another
just for giggles I look for the same thing and it's not
there. Going
windowsish isn't the way I'd like to see things go either,
but I am still
mindful that some refining would certainly be appreciated.
On 24-Oct-08, at 11:08 AM, Krister Ekstrom wrote:
24 okt 2008 kl. 16.48 skrev Jacob Schmude:
Further, I for one hope that Voiceover doesn't borrow too
much from the
Windows screen readers' methods of web navigation.
I couldn't agree with you more there. The last thing i want
is a mac
platform with a windows screen reader. I want this os as
unique and as
good as it is today!
--
/Krister
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