It is difficult to answer questions regarding corporate environments.
There are many ways they can be set up depending on what your IT team
likes to do.

For example some companies like to disable scripts which has an impact
on MS Office. It also may affect the WE scripts written in Visual Basic.

There are also companies that use policies to determine how little or
how much one can do on their own. These are often more difficult to
manage for individuals, but it still is possible.

For example we had it set up for all users here to have Quick View Plus
installed if it was not on a PC. Quick View Plus is not accessible and I
was not included in the group object that kept installing this utility
after I removed it. Fortunately being part of the network operating
systems engineering team I have the ability to allow my work station to
install and remove what I need or cannot use.

I do not work in the area that manages our firewall. This affects how We
scripts are updated. Now I need to download each one individually then
install it myself.

There are also sites that are blocked for everyone here. They might be
DropBox or web mail sites for example.

Vic




________________________________

From: Vaughan Dodd [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, February 13, 2013 3:19 PM
To: '[email protected]'
Subject: Window-eyes and Corporate Security



Hi all.



I am hoping that my question is as clear as it can be: I am of the
opinion that my work's internal computer security systems are causing
Window-eyes to operate erratically, and I wonder if there is somewhere a
summary of the components of Window-eyes which need to be able to access
software resources unencumbered by corporate security systems.



Apps do not install correctly; I have problems making changes to Office
options to improve performance of Word and Excel in Office 2010, and
Internet Explorer v9cannot be customised to take advantage of
accessibility features.  Outlook halts at random.



Excel crashed yesterday when I wanted to use a pull-down menu.  Unlike
the other examples - it now looks as if my corporate profile copy of
Excel is corrupt.    in general, whenever I want to make changes, or
when a failure occurs, I need to wait for a support analyst with
administration rights.



One of the first steps is for the analyst to restore my user profile,
and this often means a reinstall of window-eyes, braille display drivers
etc, and doesn't in the longer term improve stability.



I am running Windows Seven (I think Enterprise), Window-eyes v8.



My colleague uses Jaws and I know that she has instability issues as
well, which might be influenced by corporate security.





Finally: I do not believe that I should by default blame Window-'eyes,
but it does need an optimum environment in order to work correctly.  My
Excel example: Window-eyes does not crash, but I think that the failure
may be related to Window-eyes components.





Thanks.



Vaughan.



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