The way in which some of these things work can be determined by the app you are 
using, and how you have things set up.

Interacting:

 For example, in the mail app, I need to  interact with the messages table to 
read my mail.

When going to an address in Safari, sometimes the page doesn't open, and I have 
to interact with the HTML, to open it, so that I can interact with it. I also 
have to interact with phrames on websites.

Locally, I need to interact with the sidebar, and/or my home folder when saving 
files etc.

It actually is quite intuitive once you get use to thinking about the phrase 
'interact.' If you just want to read something, then that is what you do, but 
if you want to open something, select something or edit something, you may well 
have to 'interact.' -

Andy
On 5 Jul 2014, at 16:22, Eleanor Martha Burke <[email protected]> 
wrote:

> Hi All, I have been coming to terms with a Mac for over 6 weeks now on a 
> daily basis and a little before that from time to time.  However there are 
> some concepts I really cannot come to work out which by now should be fairly 
> obvious to me.  Hope someone can clarify these for me.
> 
> At this point I would like to say I have good experience of Windows and it is 
> because of this I am finding some of these Mac concepts difficult rather than 
> them being intuitive.
> 
> Here goes then,
> 
> 1. I think as a rule of thumb quic nav is mainly used for navagating the web 
> but not otherwise.  Is this correct?
> 2. While I know that single key navagation can be used with the tab key, I 
> cannot work out when I need to tab and when I need to vo right arrow.
> 3. Interacting and uninteracting, I just don't know when and when not to do 
> this.  When someone has guided me they have said to interact and now 
> uninteract, left to my own devices I cannot make a decision as to when to 
> interact and when not to.
> 
> Sorry if these are silly questions but I think once I have clarification on 
> these I will have moved forward quite a pace with my Mac. 
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To reply to this post, please address your message to [email protected]

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As the Mac Access Dot Net administrators, we do our very best to ensure that 
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worm-free.  However, this should in no way replace your own security strategy.  
We assume neither liability nor responsibility should something unpredictable 
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Please remember to update your membership preferences periodically by visiting 
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