John,

I'm not seeing this. My guess is you have a Window-Eyes app that is causing this. Since we are nw hooking the keyboard at a lower level we are now able to get keys even before the operating system sees them. Which explains why the app is now able to get the key and act on it. I suggest you disable all Window-Eyes apps from the Apps menu and I'm guessing the problem goes away. You'll then need to figure out which is doing this unless others chime in with suggestions.

Doug

On 11/25/2014 1:25 PM, John Farley wrote:
Window-eyes 9.0.1
Windows 7 64 bit

I use MS hotkeys which I have defined to speed up the use of various MS
products, here are two examples.
I have <control><alt>I set up to initiate Internet Explorer and
<control><alt>e to initiate Outlook 2010.

When I use this I now get "I acute accent" and "e acute accent" voiced which
did not happen on earlier versions. That sounds like the ASCII equivalent of
the key combinations.

How do I stop this incorrect behaviour please?

Regards, John

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