I'll paste the text below. This is the Markdown text I keep locally, so you'll 
see some links and bits of syntax here and there. It's quite readable, though, 
and isn't HTML or anything that will be a headache. That said, the Unhand can 
go online, and AppleVis should be pretty nice to mobile devices, so if you want 
heading navigation you can try loading the link I sent on the Sense.

###What Is Night Owl?
[Night 
Owl](http://www.applevis.com/apps/mac/social-networking/night-owl-aka-yorufukurou)
 is the only accessible Twitter client for the Mac, or at least the most 
popular among VoiceOver users. With it, you can retweets, manage lists, send 
direct messages, save searches, and much more. While most of the app is 
relatively simple, some parts can be a bit confusing, and there are some 
undocumented shortcuts and features. This guide will walk you through the 
basics of the app, and explained most of the features. If audio is your thing, 
AppleVis has has a 
[Night Owl 
podcast.](http://www.applevis.com/podcast/episodes/introduction-yorufukurou-mac-twitter-client-actually-works-voiceover)

This tutorial assumes that you have a basic level of familiarity with 
VoiceOver. You don't need to know any advanced commands, but the 
basics--navigating the screen, activating buttons and pop-up menu's, 
interacting, and so on--are required. Of course, you will also need to already 
have a Twitter Account activated–you need to know that accounts user name and 
password in order to login. If you don't yet have an account, creating one is 
simple and free. To learn more about twitter, and to create your own account, 
visit the 
[Twitter website.](http://www.twitter.com)

###Signing In
When you first launch Night Owl, you will be prompted to sign into your Twitter 
account. If you are not, or if you are already signed into one account but want 
to sign into a different one, open Night Owl's preferences with command-comma, 
choose the accounts button from the toolbar, then find and activate the "Ad" 
button. You will be taken to a webpage where you enter your Twitter username 
and password, and Then press enter to sign in. Assuming your credentials were 
correct, you will be asked to grant Night Owl access to your Twitter account; 
do so, and you will be returned to the main window. Now that you have 
successfully signed in, it's time to see how this app works.

###the Main Window
This is where you read and manage tweets, compose new tweets, find users, and 
more. There are several important things here, and we'll examine them one at a 
time. To make things easy, we'll go from the top of the window and use vo-right 
to move from item to item. Press vo-shift-home (vo-shift-fn-left on Apple 
keyboards with no Home key) to get to the top, and you'll land on a text label 
telling you the current tab (which is probably Timeline) and the name of the 
account you're using. Press vo-right to get to….

####The Toolbar
The first important thing you'll find is a toolbar. Interact with it and you'll 
see buttons for viewing a user's timeline or the conversation, marking a tweet 
as read, and more. While you can certainly use all these buttons if you like, 
all of them also have keyboard shortcuts which you will probably find much more 
convenient. Stop interacting with this toolbar once you've reviewed it, and 
press vo-right. You'll next come to…

####The Drawer
Once you land on this item, which VoiceOver identifies simply as "Drawer", 
interact with it to explore the contents. The Drawer is where information and 
management tools for the author of the focused tweet will appear. For example, 
you can follow/unfollow, block, or report the user; you can view their profile, 
location, and picture; you can see how many followers they have, how many 
people follow them, and how may tweets they've posted; and you can see details 
on the tweet in focus over in the list.

The one item in here with which you can actually interact is the "User Action 
Menu". Once you activate this menu, you have several options, all of which are 
self-explanatory--Reply, Retweet, Direct Message, etc. The "Following Status" 
submenu is where you go to follow, un-follow, or block a user, and it also 
shows you if the user is following you (you'll need to vo-up arrow to see that 
last one; plain old arrow keys will skip over it as it is dimmed). Once you're 
done, stop interacting with the Drawer, vo-right, and land on…

####New Tweet
There are three items associated with writing tweets, and they start just after 
the Drawer. Note that you may see an item called just "image" first; I have no 
idea what this is, and it has no label or help tag. Anyway, the first item 
we're interested in is an edit field, where you type your tweet. If you are 
retweeting with a comment, direct messaging, or replying to a tweet, text will 
appear in this field with your cursor at the start or end, as necessary for the 
action you're performing. Note that this field is not automatically emptied; if 
you first try to DM someone, but don't send that message and later reply, the 
text for direct messaging will appear in the field in addition to the reply 
text.

After the text field is the "Action Menu Button". Activating this will show you 
a list of actions to take on the tweet you are writing, but you will rarely 
need them. Shortening URLs, for instance, does not appear to do anything, nor 
does Stick Hashtags. The rest of the items can be found in the Tweet menu 
(vo-m, then find and activate the menu) along with a wider set of options than 
what is available in this popup menu. Plus, nearly all of them have hotkeys 
assigned, making this menu redundant.

Finally, you have the character counter. This is a label that tells you how 
many characters appear in the text field, so you can check to see who many you 
have left. If you exceed Twitter's 140 character limit, the counter will be 
negative. Text with 145 characters in it, for example, will cause the counter 
to show -5. Note that your punctuation level may cause VoiceOver to not read 
the hyphen in front of the number, indicating that you've exceeded the limit. 
The last thing in the main window, to the right of the counter, is…

####Tweets Table
This table has no label, but it is the only table in the window. It shows the 
tweets for the currently selected tab--more on that in a moment. You can review 
tweets by moving to the table and pressing up or down arrow, but be very sure 
Quick Nav is off. You can also use J and K if you like. Note that you do *not* 
need to interact with the table, only be focused on it. You can jump to the 
start or end with option-up or option-down.

###Tabs
By default, you're viewing your Timeline Tab, which is tweets from all the 
accounts you follow as well as any mentions you get from any accounts. However, 
you can choose to view mentions, DMs, saved searches, and so on if you like. 
Each one of these is called a "tab". To change tabs, you can either:

* use command-left or command-right. As you do, the tab changes, but VoiceOver 
doesn't say what the new tab is. Use vo-f2 if you need to check, as this speaks 
the window title and thus the newly focused tab.
* use control-1 through control-0. Control-1 is your Home tab, control-2 is 
mentions, control-3 is DMs. After that it depends on your preferences, but 
you'll quickly get to know which numbers go to which tabs if you use this 
method a lot.

###Managing Tweets
As you read tweets, you can do a lot of things. Nearly all of these are in the 
dropdown menus--accessed with vo-m--and I encourage you to review those menus 
to see just what is available. Here are some common actions to get you started:

* reply: enter. This replies to the sender, and does not include anyone else 
mentioned in the tweet.
* Reply all: shift-enter. This replies to the tweet, mentioning every username 
that is in the original.
* D: send direct message to the sender of the focused tweet. This is allowed no 
matter what, but if you try to send a DM and Twitter won't accept it, you'll 
see an error. Note that hitting enter in your DMs tab will automatically reply 
with a DM, not a standard reply. Thus, in that tab, enter and D do the same 
thing.
* F: favorite current tweet, or un-favorite it if you already favorited it.
* Cmd-shift-v: retweet. This posts the retweet straight away, with no 
confirmation (depending on your preferences).
* cmd-option-v: retweet with comment. This places the original tweet, along 
with "RT @username: ", in the tweet text field. Your cursor is positioned at 
the start of the field, letting you type your comment. Note that no space is 
inserted before the RT, so remember to put one in.
* L: open links in tweet. This will open any links found in the current tweet 
as new tabs in Safari, and will switch you to Safari as it does so. If you 
like, you can have Safari do this in the background instead; look in 
Preferences > Advanced. Image links will not be opened, so if you hit L on a 
tweet you know had a link and get an error sound, the cause is most likely that 
the link is to an image.
* cmd-t: translate tweet to target language. You can set what language tweets 
are translated into in Preferences > Services.
* cmd-e: send all links in the current tweet to your read later service 
(configured in Night Owl's preferences).
* exclamation mark (shift-1): mark the tweet as spam, and report the user to 
Twitter. This will also remove the tweet from your timeline.
* cmd-c: copy tweet text to your clipboard.
* cmd-2: view most recent 100 tweets sent by the sender of the current tweet
* cmd-3: view all tweets in the conversation of which the current tweet is a 
part
* cmd-1: return to normal view if in user timeline or conversation views

###Finding Users
The next question people usually have is: how do you locate new people to 
follow, or look at someone's timeline?

As mentioned, pressing cmd-2 on a tweet will show you the most recent tweets 
that user sent, but that doesn't help if you have no tweets from the user 
you're looking for. In that case, press cmd-u, type in the username, and press 
enter. You will be taken to the user's public timeline, from where you can use 
the "User Action Menu" in the drawer to follow or un-follow them. You can also 
reply to or retweet a tweet in this view without having to follow the user.

Note: as of the time of this writing, there is a bug in Night Owl. Through the 
place where you type in a username after pressing cmd-u is a combo box, meaning 
that you should be able to type a few characters and down arrow to review 
possible matches, you can't. When you try, Night Owl goes busy for a while, and 
you eventually have to press escape to close the window. The feature works 
perfectly if you type the full username without trying to arrow in the combo 
box, though.

###Searching Your Tabs
You can search for words in the current tab, perfect for locating a tweet you 
partly remember or quickly looking at tweets containing a hashtag. Please 
remember, though, that this searches *only* the currently selected tab; full 
searches will be discussed in the next section.

To start a search, move to the tab you want to search and press cmd-f. you will 
be placed in a text field; type the word or phrase you want to find, and press 
enter. You can now tab or vo-right to the table of tweets, which will hold only 
those tweets that contain whatever you just typed. As you'd expect, you can use 
all the usual tweet commands here. When you are finished with the search, find 
the "Done" button and activate it. You will be returned to the timeline from 
where you launched the search.

###Searching Twitter
The next step up from a local search is to search all of Twitter. Night Owl 
lets you find tweets not just by hashtags, but by usernames or even regular 
expressions as well. To get started, go to the Tools menu and choose "Configure 
Custom Tabs…" or press cmd-p. This is called "custom tabs" because any search 
you do will be stored in its own tab, letting you save the search if you want 
to.

When you first see this search dialog, you will probably land on an empty 
table. Find and activate the "Add" button, which will add a new custom tab and 
bring up its options.

First, you will find a text field into which to type the tabs name. This is 
what will be used for the window title when this tab is active, so a meaningful 
name--like "#AppleVis global search"--is a good idea.

The second thing to do is choose the kind of tab you want, using the four radio 
buttons. Your choices are:

* Filter Tab: this searches your timeline for usernames, keywords, or regular 
expressions. This is *not* a global Twitter search, but rather a search of the 
tweets already in your timeline.
* Twitter Search: this *does* search all of Twitter. You can look for words 
only, and this is the usual way of looking up and/or tracking a hashtag.
* Advanced Twitter Search: this, too, searches all of Twitter. The "advanced" 
means that you can use search terms to find tweets from a given date range, 
geographical location, and more. Once you create a tab of this type, you will 
find a button that takes you to Twitter's Advanced search page, explaining just 
how to use the feature.
* Twitter List: this is how you'd add a list as a tab. You can also create new 
lists, and modify lists that are already created.

The specific steps for each tab type are a bit different, but everything is 
labeled and self explanatory. All tabs have an "Options" button, where you can 
configure options such as alerting when new tweets arrive in the tab, whether 
to count unread tweets toward Night Owl's badge, and more. When you've set up 
your new tab the way you want, find and activate the "Apply" button, then the 
"OK" button. The configuration dialog will close, and you will be placed in 
your new tab. Now, if you go back into the Custom Tabs dialog, you'll see your 
new tab in the table; you can add a new one, use the options to configure the 
one selected in the table, or delete the tab using the Remove button (warning: 
this button removes the tab immediately, with no confirmation).

###Muting Users or Hashtags
Sometimes, you want to follow someone so you can DM them, but you don't want to 
have their tweets appear in your timeline. Or, there's a hashtag you really 
don't care about, so you want have any tweet with that term not appear. 
Fortunately, Night Owl has a powerful muting system. Please note that this does 
*not* tie into Twitter's own mute rules, so anything you set up in Night Owl 
will not apply to other Twitter clients or the Twitter website.

Press cmd-b to open the Mute Rules dialog, or choose it from the Tools menu. 
You will land on the first of four radio buttons, each letting you mute by a 
different criterium: keyword, username, regular expression, or application. No 
matter which you choose, the process is the same: select the type of muting you 
want to do, vo-right to the text field, type what you want muted, activate the 
Apply button, and then hit the OK button. Night Owl will apply the mute rule(s) 
you just set up, and your timeline should get less cluttered immediately. If 
you don't see your rule(s) taking effect, hit cmd-ctrl-t to re-filter.

###Preferences
I won't go through all of Night Owl's preferences here, as they are all labeled 
and obvious; anything you find that lacks a label, in my experience, does 
nothing at all and can be ignored. I will, however, tell you about the settings 
you should look at, especially as a VoiceOver user. The following lists the tab 
where the preference is found, then the name of the preference itself.

* Accounts > General > Unread management items: all the checkboxes dealing with 
unread management affect how Night Owl's badge (the number spoken after the 
name) is managed. For example, if you uncheck "manage unread tweets in Timeline 
Tab", and you get a mention which you read in your timeline instead of mentions 
tab, you will find the badge does not change. If you check it, and read that 
mention in your timeline, the badge *will* change.
* Accounts > General > Use Tweet Marker to sync scroll position: in theory, 
this should sync your position on your timeline with other apps (such as 
Twitterrific or Tweetings on iOS)which also support Tweet Marker. 
Unfortunately, I have not worked out a way to get VoiceOver to move to the 
position Tweet Marker indicates, making this feature effectively useless for 
reading tweets in Night Owl. If you figure out how to make this work, please 
leave a comment. However, enabling this *will* let other apps that properly 
scroll to Tweet Marker's position function; in other words, other apps will 
move to where you last left off in Night Owl, but Night Owl will not move to 
where you left off in other apps.
* Text Input > Show candidates automatically Autocomplete: uncheck it. This 
setting causes Night Owl to offer suggestions as you type usernames or 
hashtags, and sometimes it works. More often, though, it does nothing and 
causes you to lose typing feedback.
* Appearance: despite the name, some settings are worth looking at in here. You 
can set whether tweet times are relative or absolute, if screen names or 
usernames are used, and more. Many of the settings don't appear to have an 
affect--show one-sided follow, enable hyperlinks in tweets, etc--but some are 
important.
* Tab > Move between tabs when jumping to unread Tweet Unread: the spacebar 
moves you to the first unread DM or mention. This setting will control whether 
that command lets you move from your current tab to the tab where the unread 
item is. Note that I've found it to sometimes not work correctly.
* Colors: all these settings let you control the color of different types of 
tweets, as well as the backgrounds. This could be extremely useful for low 
vision people, so if you have some sight, it's worth looking in here and 
setting the colors that work best for you.

###Multiple Accounts
Night Owl lets you have as many accounts as you like. Simply go to Preferences 
> Accounts, choose the Add button, and sign into your account to add it. As 
you'll see in the Accounts tab of Preferences, you can customize each account's 
sound settings, notifications, and more independently of the other accounts.

Once added, you can switch between accounts from any tab with option-cmd-up or 
option-cmd-down. Accounts are sorted by the order in which they are added, with 
the newest at the bottom. I can't find a way to sort them manually.

###That's It
That's all there is to Night Owl, though I didn't cover *everything* possible 
with this app. I encourage you to explore the dropdown menus, especially the 
Tools, Tweet, and Timeline menus. If you have questions, if I missed something 
important, or if I didn't make something here as clear as I needed to, please 
leave a comment.
> On Apr 20, 2015, at 8:33 PM, Stacey Robinson <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Alex
> 
> Is their a way I can save this so I can read it on my Braille Sense Onhand?
> A text file would be great.
> 
> Blessings,
> Stacey Robinson and GEB dog Kirk.
>                               
> mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>> On Apr 20, 2015, at 7:07 PM, Alex Hall <[email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>> 
>> You have good timing--I posted a guide and podcast on AppleVis quite 
>> recently. Here's the guide, which contains a link to the podcast:
>> http://www.applevis.com/guides/mac-apps/guide-night-owl 
>> <http://www.applevis.com/guides/mac-apps/guide-night-owl>
>>> On Apr 20, 2015, at 7:57 PM, Stacey Robinson <[email protected] 
>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> I have Nightowl and really don’t know how to use it.
>>> Is there a guide I can look up on how to use this program with VoiceOver
>>> Blessings,
>>> Stacey Robinson and GEB dog Kirk.
>>>                             
>>> mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>>>> On Apr 20, 2015, at 6:53 PM, Darcy Burnard <[email protected] 
>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Hi Jürgen.  In Nightowl pressing the spacebar will take you to the oldest 
>>>> unread tweet.  So if you're at the top of the list, pressing the spacebar 
>>>> should do what you want.  As a matter of fact, I mainly use the spacebar 
>>>> to browse tweets.  What I do when launching the app, is hit control 2 to 
>>>> go to my replys tab.  If you get through all unread tweets in a tweet, 
>>>> spacebar will take you to the first unread tweet in the next tab.  So 
>>>> pressing spacebar moves me first to replies, direct mentions, all my list 
>>>> tabs, and finally my main timeline.  When reading through my main 
>>>> timeline, the spacebar moves me past tweets I may have already read in 
>>>> other tabs.
>>>> Hopefully this made sense.
>>>> Darcy
>>>> 
>>>>> On Apr 20, 2015, at 1:40 PM, Jürgen Fleger <[email protected] 
>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi Alex,
>>>>> here’s the issue:
>>>>> I’m on top of the tweet list in the timeline table. I leave Night Owl for 
>>>>> several hours while I’m away doing other things but the Mac is still 
>>>>> switched on and Night Owl is running. When I’m back at my Mac and check 
>>>>> Night Owl for the next time I’m still on top of the tweet list but on the 
>>>>> newest tweet and not at the position in the tweet list I was before when 
>>>>> I left my Computer alone. All I can do now is to scrol down manually to 
>>>>> find the position where I left several hours ago.
>>>>> Is this more clear? Do you know this behaviour?
>>>>> All the best
>>>>> Jürgen
>>>>> 
>>>>>> Am 20.04.2015 um 16:00 schrieb Alex Hall <[email protected] 
>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>>:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Others have hit all your questions, so I'll just mention the scrolling. 
>>>>>> Unless you mean visually, I'm not sure what you're talking about here. 
>>>>>> If you close and re-open Night Owl, you will be at the top, but so long 
>>>>>> as you leave it open, your position never changes. Can you describe what 
>>>>>> the problem is and how we can reproduce it?
>>>>>>> On Apr 20, 2015, at 7:24 AM, 'Maxwell Ivey' via MacVisionaries 
>>>>>>> <[email protected] 
>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> hi; then post a tweet on their time line. you can do that whether you 
>>>>>>> follow them or not. and i use it on my mac. i have the time for refresh 
>>>>>>> set to like five or ten minutes. and i arrow over to the table. while 
>>>>>>> in the table i only move up or down when i want to. and if i want to go 
>>>>>>> to the top i just press 0 because there are no twitter i d with numbers 
>>>>>>> at the beginning and so i'm automatically taken to the top. best of 
>>>>>>> luck, max 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Maxwell Ivey Jr.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> phone 979-215-1770
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> Skype Maxwell Ivey
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> twitter @maxwellivey
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> as mr. midway
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> www.midwaymarketplace.com <http://www.midwaymarketplace.com/>
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> email [email protected] 
>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> as the blind blogger 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> www.theblindblogger.net <http://www.theblindblogger.net/>
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> email [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On Apr 20, 2015, at 1:45 AM, Jürgen Fleger wrote:
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> is Night Owl the only accessible twitter client for the Mac you know 
>>>>>>>> of?
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> My issues with this app: 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 1. The timeline scrolls always to the top automatically and it seems 
>>>>>>>> to be insignificant which settings I’ve set. I tried different 
>>>>>>>> settings but it had no impact on this behaviour.
>>>>>>>> 2. I’m not able to find a support address except for twitter accounts 
>>>>>>>> of the developers. But I’m not able to send direct messages to people 
>>>>>>>> who don’t follow me and so there’s no way to reach them.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Any ideas?
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> All the best
>>>>>>>> Jürgen
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google 
>>>>>>>> Groups "MacVisionaries" group.
>>>>>>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send 
>>>>>>>> an email to [email protected] 
>>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>>>>> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
>>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>>>>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>>>>>>>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>>>>>>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>>>>>>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google 
>>>>>>> Groups "MacVisionaries" group.
>>>>>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send 
>>>>>>> an email to [email protected] 
>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
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>>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>>>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>>>>>>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>>>>>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>>>>>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> --
>>>>>> Have a great day,
>>>>>> Alex Hall
>>>>>> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google 
>>>>>> Groups "MacVisionaries" group.
>>>>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send 
>>>>>> an email to [email protected] 
>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>>> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
>>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>>>>>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>>>>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>>>>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> -- 
>>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
>>>>> "MacVisionaries" group.
>>>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
>>>>> email to [email protected] 
>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
>>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>>>>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>>>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>>>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>>>> 
>>>> 
>>>> -- 
>>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
>>>> "MacVisionaries" group.
>>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
>>>> email to [email protected] 
>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
>>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>>>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>>> 
>>> 
>>> -- 
>>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
>>> "MacVisionaries" group.
>>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
>>> email to [email protected] 
>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
>>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
>> 
>> 
>> --
>> Have a great day,
>> Alex Hall
>> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
>> 
>> -- 
>> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
>> "MacVisionaries" group.
>> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
>> email to [email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
>> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
>> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
>> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
>> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.
> 
> 
> -- 
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
> "MacVisionaries" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an 
> email to [email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>.
> To post to this group, send email to [email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>.
> Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries 
> <http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries>.
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout 
> <https://groups.google.com/d/optout>.


--
Have a great day,
Alex Hall
[email protected]

-- 
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