Alex,
Thanks very much.
I appreciate that.

Blessings,
Stacey Robinson and GEB dog Kirk.
                                
mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
> On Apr 20, 2015, at 7:55 PM, Alex Hall <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 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
>  
> <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
>  
> <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 <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] 
>> <mailto:[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]>.
>>>>>>>> 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>.
>>>>> 
>>>>> 
>>>>> -- 
>>>>> 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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>>>> 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 
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>>> 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 
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>> <mailto:[email protected]>.
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>> 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>.

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