Hello; try the following;
1, open Chrome,
Now, press the alt-key,
Up arrow until you hear;
Help sub-menu, right arrow to open,
Enter on about, you should find the info.
If you need the latest version,
Go to,
www.ninite.com
Statistics are like a bikini. What they reveal is suggestive, but
what they conceal is vital.
-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Maria Campbell
Sent: Friday, July 7, 2017 12:35 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] An Updated Text Tutorial on Using the Google
Chrome Browser with JAWS or NVDA
How does one update Google Chrome?
[email protected]
"Preach the Gospel, and when necessary use words!"
--St. Francis
On 7/7/2017 12:22 PM, David Whitehead wrote:
> Hello there;
> First, are you certain your using the latest version of chrome?
> Secondly, do you have the latest version of adobe flash player?
> Thirdly, have you tried, call 866-800-1275
>
> Statistics are like a bikini. What they reveal is suggestive, but
> what they conceal is vital.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of jimrawls
> Sent: Friday, July 7, 2017 12:00 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] An Updated Text Tutorial on Using the Google
> Chrome Browser with JAWS or NVDA
>
> David,
> I have read through the tutorial and it is wonderful. However, my game day
> audio remains. I can't get any game to play using game day audio on
chrome.
> Any ideas on how to fix this? Jim
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
> Behalf Of David Moore
> Sent: Thursday, July 6, 2017 3:17 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: [JAWS-Users] An Updated Text Tutorial on Using the Google Chrome
> Browser with JAWS or NVDA
>
> Hi all,
> I did an Updated text tutorial on using the Google Chrome browser. It is
> pasted right here in this email, so you can read it, and give me feedback.
> On each line, I tell you what my computer says as I take you through the
> Google Chrome menu, and I take you carefully through the settings web
page.
> This is a lot like the Options page in Firefox, but it is easier to
> navigate.
> I hope this really helps you get started with Chrome, because it works so
> well for me.
> Here is the tutorial right below!
> Tutorial for Using the Google Chrome Browser
> By David Moore
> This tutorial will be done with the latest update of Chrome.
> I will also use JAWS 18 and NVDA 2017.2for this tutorial, because they
both
> work the same in Chrome.
> Finally, I will use Windows 10 Creators Update latest public build.
> I will assume that you have downloaded and installed Chrome.
> There should be a shortcut on your desktop.
> First, I will launch Chrome. We will not create a home page until we get
to
> the Chrome settings web page.
> This is a lot like the Options page in Firefox, or the Options dialog in
IE.
> Pressing the Alt key, opens the one and only, Chrome menu, with many
choices
> that I will arrow down through.
> The first very important step, is to press Windows+up arrow to maximise
the
> window. Chrome often opens with the window not maximise, and you will get
> undesirable results.
> I will press the Alt key.
> The Chrome menu is open.
> I will press insert+up arrow to hear the first option in this menu.
> New Tab, CTRL+T.
> You can press that command right from the web site you are on.
> New Window, CTRL+N
> You can press these commands right from your web page, instead of coming
> here.
> New incognito Window.
> History sub menu.
> I will press right arrow here to see what is in this sub menu!
> History, CTRL+H
> So, there is a key command for reading your history.
> You can read a few sites you were on right here.
> I will press left arrow to close this history sub menu.
> Downloads, CTRL+J
> There is the command for opening your downloads you have downloaded with
> Chrome.
> Next, the important Bookmarks sub menu.
> I will press right arrow, to open this.
> I hear, bookmark this page, CTRL+D
> That command will bookmark the page you are reading.
> Next down arrow, says show bookmarks bar, CTRL+Shift+B
> That command, will show your bookmarks on your Chrome browser for all to
> see. I do not want that.
> Here is the important one.
> manage bookmarks
> The command is, CTRL+Shift+O
> In here, you can organize your bookmarks into folders, see the bookmarks
you
> have imported from different browsers, and very importantly, you can
> download, to your computer, an HTML file of all of your bookmarks in
Chrome.
> On your computer, you can press enter on this file, after it downloads,
and
> a page will show up in Chrome with a list of all bookmarks you have saved
in
> Chrome. This is an awesome way to download all of your bookmarks right to
> your computer, so you can back them up.
> That is all for manage bookmarks.
> Next, I hear import bookmarks and settings.
> press enter on this, and you can import all bookmarks and settings from
IE,
> and Firefox, right into Google Chrome, and they will be in their
> corresponding folders.
> Now, I hear all of my saved bookmarks as I continue to arrow down.
> Very important!
> Sometimes, when I open that bookmarks sub menu, I do not land on the
choices
> I mension here, but instead, I start hearing my saved bookmarks. If this
> happens, I press up arrow a few times, and it gets me to these choices.
> Keep in mind, that many of these choices, like bookmark manager, have key
> commands, so you do not have to come to this bookmarks sub menu at all.
You
> only need to come here most of the time, to arrow through your saved
> bookmarks, and enter on the desired one.
> The next few are very self explanatory.
> The next one I will mension, is the more tools submenu.
> I will press right arrow on this.
> I hear Save Page as, and the command, CTRL+S.
> Next, Save to desktop.
> This allows you to save the favorite of the page right to your desktop.
This
> is how you do this in Chrome, instead of doing this in the file menu in
IE.
> It is hidden under this more tools submenu.
> Clear Browsing data, and there is the key command, CTRL+Shift+Delete key.
> Extentions, In here, you can add extentions, delete extentions and so on.
> These are the same as add ons, in IE.
> They are called Extensions in Chrome.
> The last two that I will mention, are settings, and the help sub menu.
> Now, we will press enter on settings, and a web like page will open where
> the virtual cursor will turn on with JAWS, and NVDA will be in Brows mode.
> First, on this page, there is an edit field to search for a setting to
> change.
> You can simply press enter to get into forms mode with JAWS or focus mode
> with NVDA, and sign into Chrome with your email and password associated
with
> your Google Account.
> This is very accessible now; a year ago, it was not.
> Now, you can press enter on sync.
> There is a combo box here, and I chose to sync everything that I bookmark
> and my history in Chrome to all devices. I can get on another computer,
and
> all of my bookmarks are on that second computer, for example. That is very
> powerful.
> You can import bookmarks and settings here, just like you could under the
> Bookmarks sub menu.
> Now, we have a series of headings, that you can just press H for heading,
to
> get to.
> Now, under the appearance heading, You first have themes, which I did
> nothing with.
> Next, you can open the Chrome web store. You can get hundreds of
extentions,
> and more.
> Show Home, Here is where you can see what you set your home page to.
> Now, there are two radio buttons, and I chose the one to enter with a
custom
> web address.
> Now, go to the search engin heading.
> This is a heading.
> There are headings on this settings page.
> I chose to use Google search engin in the address bar. This is a combo
box.
> The next heading, is on start up.
> Finally, here is where you set up your home page.
> There are three radio buttons here.
> I chose the third one, to open a selected page or selected pages.
> Next, I was able to enter:
> www.Google.Com.
> That is my home page that will open each time I start Chrome.
> Next, you get to the heading advanced settings.
> You have to press enter on this, to open it up, because it is collapsed.
> As soon as you press enter, you down arrow to:
> Privacy and settings heading.
> Each of these buttons, say clickable.
> Here, press enter to check, or to uncheck.
> When you press enter, you will hear JAWS go into forms mode and NVDA go
into
> focus mode, so just press enter again. So really, you press enter twice to
> check, or enter twice to uncheck.
> Next, there is:
> Passwords and forms heading.
> Press enter twice here on each clickable button to check or to uncheck.
> Languages, I do nothing with that.
> Downloads.
> This is where you set where you want your downloads to go, and you can set
> whether you want to be prompted each time you download something.
> I definitely want the prompt.
> I do nothing with the Printing or accessibility headings.
> The System heading, you can turn on or off open proxy settings.
> Lastly, there is the reset heading, with a button to enter on that will
> reset Chrome back to its default settings.
> That is it for settings.
> Notice, we made a lot of changes under the advanced settings. You cannot
see
> these, unless you press enter to expand these.
> Now, just press CTRL+F4 or CTRL+W to get out of this settings page, and go
> back to Google Chrome. The settings page, opens in a new tab in Chrome,
that
> is why you can press CTRL+F4 or CTRL+W to get out of it.
> Now, press the Alt key again. Up arrow once to get to the end of the menu
> where we were with the settings.
> You see exit, up arrow and you see the help sub menu, right under the
> settings choice.
> I press right arrow on this help sub menu, and you can enter on the help
> center to get a lot of help using Chrome.
> To open a web site, just press CTRL+L or Alt+D and type the URL.
> Chrome for me, is so much quicker with web sites that involve streamming
TV
> and Watching movies, and so on.
> For me, Chrome opens large news sites very quickly compared to IE.
> Lastly, All JAWS and NVDA navigation key commands work in Chrome. For
> example, you can press F7 to open a list of links with JAWS, and the
> elements list with NVDA. All of that is the exact same.
> This is the end of the tutorial.
> David Moore
> Sent from Mail for Windows 10
>
> For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
> http://www.jaws-users.com/help/
>
>
> For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
> http://www.jaws-users.com/help/
>
>
> For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
> http://www.jaws-users.com/help/
For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
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For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
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