I disagree here.  The ribbons can be learned with a little study, and
there are add-ons that you can buy that provide an alternative interface
to the ribbons.  I believe that the role of a screen reader is to
provide access, not necessarily to provide an alternative interface.
JAWS has done many things over the years to wed customers to their
program.  Older versions of JAWS used the F6 key to go to the desktop,
even though there was an easy to use Windows hot key that would do the
same.  Research-it is an example of another such gimmick. It doesn't do
anything that Google doesn't do, and it breaks every time one of the
URLs it points to changes, requiring users to download and install
another build of the program. And, if you are on the JAWS listservs, you
will notice that the NUMPAD-INSERT key is referred to as the JAWS key,
and JAWS users don't even know that it can perform other functions.
These kinds of gimmicks are a way to hook customers and to make it much
more difficult to contemplate switching to another product.

 

Andy

 

 

From: John W. Carty [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 17, 2010 11:40 AM
To: 'gw-info (List)'
Subject: suggested feature

 

The competition has lots of problems and this is why I've switched over
to WE. However, in the latest release of the competition they came out
with a virtual ribbon. The user has the choice to switch this feature on
or off.

 

This offers a dramatic improvement for navigating the menu ribbon in ms
office.

 

I'd like to see gw do the same.

 

Thanx,

 

John

 

 


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