Hi,
With Jaws is working great, only not IE 10, and ABB Store.
But the advantage is better support of SSD, more memory, but mainly in
basic version, which you will have is Encrypting. Ok, you can agreed, that
Encryption from Microsoft is not so strong, you will have true, but..
What I don't like is new ribbon, that they didn't accepted Accessibility,
you can't turn off, what is wrong and about BIOS replacement with UFI, I
don't agree, that Microsoft is what will say, future of the marked. What
will happen, if I will remove win 8 from new laptop, where is UFI and no
Bios?



Kind Regards / Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Üdvözlettel / S pozdravem:

Marek DURILA
Nordic HC coordinator


Delivery Center
Central Europe
Brno SITE
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Czech Republic


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IBM Global Services Delivery Center Czech Republic, s.r.o.
Registered address: Brno, Technicka 2995/21, Zip code: 61600, Company ID:
26244535
Entered in the Commercial Register maintained by the Regional Court in
Brno (Part C, Entry 39922)

IBM Global Services Delivery Center Czech Republic, s.r.o.
Sídlo: Brno, Technická 2995/21, PSÈ 61600 IÈ: 26244535
Zapsaná v obchodním rejstøíku, vedeném Krajským soudem v Brnì oddíl C,
vlozka 39922




From:   "Loy" <[email protected]>
To:     "GW-info" <[email protected]>,
Date:   17.10.2012 18:01
Subject:        Re: Windows Accessibility



I've been trying Windows 8 Preview and it actually works pretty good with
narrator, but I think you will need a screen reader for full
accessibility.
I will try it with Window Eyes as soon as the beta comes out. But I don't
see any need in upgrading right now. It doesn't seem to have any
advantages
over Win 7 unless you have a touch screen device.


----- Original Message -----
From: Peter Duran
To: gw micro ([email protected])
Sent: Wednesday, October 17, 2012 11:43 AM
Subject: Windows Accessibility

Hello Bill and all,

Bill?s comments about Microsoft?s commitment to accessibility by the
disabled user is way off the mark! Both companies, Microsoft and Apple,
take accessibility to their operating systems very seriously and spend
huge amounts of money and effort to ensure accessibility as the world of
computability evolves.

If you don?t believe that, check out the W3C web site where standards and
specifications are promulgated. User Interface Automation, support for
dynamic web pages, to name only 2 innovations, are technologies to
facilitate usability by blind users.

Raul?s comments about the human condition and griping about the new are on
target.  My sighted wife complains about big changes more and more the
older she gets whereas the grand kids think nothing of it but just embrace
it.

Users whined about the Ribbon UI when Microsoft introduced it into Office
2007, but it  actually simplified interaction with programs which have
many options to pick from.

Apple Corporation did not become the second most profitable company in the
world by offering bad, unusable products. Git with it and get use to it:
change is coming whether you want it or like it!

The older I get, the longer it takes me to adapt to the new. For instance,
Word 2010 supports the Universal Character Set from Unicode Corporation
and Window-Eyes lets me insert and read its mathematical characters. So,
for the first time since I received advanced degrees in mathematics, I can
write my own math books. (it took me many months to become use to the new
way of working with math characters. Is everything perfect? No, I can?t
use the ?math zone? feature in Word; that nifty advanced function was not
made accessible in Word 2010.)

I use the iPhone nowadays but found the touch screen very annoying;
however Apple?s amazing speech recognition program Siri, lets me do most
tasks efficiently. The latest version (I downloaded yesterday) on my
iPhone fixes lots of annoyances, and I suspect iPhone access will steadily
improve. Apple (like Microsoft) has entire development teams devoted to
universal accessibility!  So, girls and boys, whine less and learn more.

Peter Duran


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