Hello,

One thing the article forgot to mention was One to One service at the Apple Store. Since Voiceover is a basic part of Mac OS X Leopard, it would be possible for someone to get a One to One membership and then learn about things like managing Mail, Address Book, iChat, System Preferences, the FInder, Spotlight, iTunes and iPod, etc. Just because a user needs to be taught these things using Voiceover doesn't mean that it can't be done. I took a One to One session on creating QuickTime movies with multiple audio tracks, and my personal trainer knew Voiceover and we both explored QuickTime Pro together.

Ryan



On Nov 14, 2008, at 12:40 PM, John Panarese wrote:

I agree. I must admit that I was both very surprised and quite pleased. At least, it seems that A Mac was used and there was much more thought put into this review.

As for Open Office, I would not say that it is fully accessible, but it surely is usable on a daily basis if one needed an office suite. The spreadsheet is surely quite impressive. The word processor takes some getting used to, but, again, one can use it.

Take Care

John Panarese

On Nov 14, 2008, at 10:49 AM, Slau wrote:


----- Original Message ----- From: "kaare dehard" <[EMAIL PROTECTED] >
It is certainly a more thoughtful
than the review done in 2005. I don't agree with all of it but let's give em marks for effort this time round...

I agree. I was a staunch critic of the 2005 review by Jay Leventhal but I sent him a message thanking him for a far better evaluation this time around and thanks to Jim Denham for his review.

Slau






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