I think it is consistant. Presumeably when sighted users look back at a page or
a document that they've tabbed away from they do not instantly find the place
that they were at.
----- Original Message -----
From: Chris Blouch
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, September 02, 2009 4:18 PM
Subject: Re: holding place in a webpage when cmd-tabbing
I suspect its a philosophical thing. There is only one focus and when you
moved it from the web page to some other place your spot on the page is gone.
Now you might want to stick something on the page to be able to jump back to
that spot again, sort of a bookmark, and that's what hotspots do. Not saying
that Apple shouldn't just drop you back where you were for convenience.
CB
James & Nash wrote:
Hello Anne,
Tha'ts good to hear. Do you know why you need to use hotspots? Why do you
think VO does not keep its place automatically - just curious. I wonder if it
could be because VO seems to treat blind users the same as sighed users. What
do you think?
Take care
james
----- Original Message -----
From: Anne Robertson
To: [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, August 29, 2009 2:00 PM
Subject: Re: holding place in a webpage when cmd-tabbing
Hello Anouk,
On Aug 29, 2009, at 11:16 AM, a radix wrote:
can you accomplish this with hotspots? I noticed yesterday i loose my
place in a webpage if i comd-tab to itunes for example.
Yes, hotspots is what you need for this. You can also use hotspots in
text documents.
Cheers,
Anne
Greetings, Anouk,
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