Here, Here. Well said. I've just migrated to mac and I'm quite surprised
with how accessible it really is. I have virtually no site, and I'm learning
to get around it quite well. I particularly love the way that you can use
the Item chooser to navigate around a page rather than tab around a hole
screen in other systems to find what you want. 

Debbie


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mrs. Lynnette
Annabel Smith
Sent: Sunday, 30 September 2012 3:39 AM
To: Mac OSX & iOS Accessibility
Subject: Making The Most Of Your Accessible Tools; A Passionate Rant [Was
"so wish apple had done this"]

Hello John, Will and all

As somebody with vision looking in, so to speak, I frequently find it
astonishing when I hear people criticising what Apple is doing with
accessibility; particularly in view of the practicalities. For instance,
unless you're a pirate and by definition, therefore, a thief, Freedom
Scientific, GW Micro and Dolphin Access, to name but three vendors, charge a
very great deal of money for their accessibility tools. Also, Microsoft
charges for their operating system, even for the most basic version, over 5
times what Apple does. VoiceOver is a free and, most of the time, very
reliable product. It gives the user access to a WYSIWYG, (what you see is
what you get) interface to websites. Most of which can, if you take the time
to learn to use it, be navigated extremely well using VoiceOver and Safari.

Ultimately, it really depends upon the individual. If you just want a sheet
of virtual paper with a hand-holding web environment, by all means use your
other products and I wish you the very best of luck in all you do.

I, (and I count my lucky stars, believe me), have the advantage of vision
and I have seen both sides of this. I do see some sites where VoiceOver just
will not play nicely and yes, we have seen some pretty spectacular crashes
at times. However, in the general scheme of things, the environment is more
stable and just as, if not more, reliable than the competition if, and it is
a very big if, the pilot of the machine takes the time and effort to learn
to handle it.

I sincerely hope that we see a time when Apple perfects their accessibility
tools. But make no mistake about it; they are committed to accessibility and
they will improve their offerings. Remember also that the competing products
have been available far far longer than has VoiceOver. Yes, I know that you
can't always go by that and I know also that Apple has been involved in the
field of accessibility for around 8 years now. However, just cast your mind
back to how things were before Apple entered the market. Apple really has
made a difference, not only to their own products, but also the competition.

I recall the vice president of one accessibility company saying:
"It's all very well having an operating system with a talking installer. But
that's not much use if you can't do anything with it afterwards."

That statement was a direct quote. It was, and remains, the utterings of a
frightened man who feared losing custom. As things have worked out, that is
exactly what has happened. Literally tens of thousands of visually impaired
users across the world have now migrated to Apple's products; desktop and
mobile. Indeed, the vice president of Freedom Scientific himself is the
proud owner of an iPhone. Make of that what you will!

Anyway, I am ranting. But I sometimes find it really disappointing when I
hear people complaining like this. People who have freedom to choose. The
long and the short of this is: If you want perfection, you'll be waiting for
a very very long time. If you are prepared to be flexible and innovative,
you have the power at your fingertips, quite literally in some cases. If,
however, you are happy with constant virtualisation, hand-holding and costly
solutions, then perhaps Apple's platforms are not for you. yes, there are
free and low-cost applications available out there for other operating
systems. And that is to be applauded. However, you are still working within
the confines of an often insecure, vulnerable and unstable environment.

Which ever option you choose to take is entirely down to your preference.
However, although I can understand a degree of frustration when things don't
quite work out; and yes, it does happen to my other half as well quite
frequently, the best thing you could do is to make the most of the failures.
Try to reliably replicate them and, if possible, send your crash reports to
Apple. That is the only way your problems will be fixed. It isn't reasonable
to expect Apple to foresee every eventuality and I urge cooperation and
patience. Believe it or not, as somebody with vision, I can tel you that
Internet Explorer 9 and FireFox 15 are not invulnerable and do crash quite
frequently, even without accessibility tools in the mix. Speaking
personally, I learned to do much more than point and click and I learned
most of it on an Apple Mac. I also made it my business to learn to use
VoiceOver in order that I can interact with my other half who is, like many
people in this group, totally bl
 ind. I feel for each and every one of you. But I urge you to try and make
the very best of what you have available. Only in that way will you be able
to evolve with the ever-changing world of technologies, assistive and
otherwise.

Ladies and gentlemen, I apologise for the rant. This is, however, a topic on
which I hold passionate views.

My very best and most sincere wishes to each and every one of you.

Lynne

On 29 Sep 2012, at 17:24, John Panarese <[email protected]> wrote:

    There are a lot of things you can do to fiddle and troubleshoot such
issues.  Do you have examples of sites and what you are specifically looking
for?  The reality is that VoiceOver and Safari are not perfect, but neither
are web designers.  Don't discount the possiblity of the site simply being
badly designed.

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