Hi Esther,
Yes, it took me a while to tackle these scripts but it's not hard once you 
follow the good instructions that you provide. I will move them to the itunes 
folder and see what happens next. I assume you can assign a keyboard shortcut 
for these. Wondering where that might be done. Perhaps under system 
prefs/keyboard? Thanks.
Marc

On Aug 18, 2012, at 4:25 PM, Esther <mori...@mac.com> wrote:

> Hi Marc,
> 
> There's probably a better way to amend the AppleScripts, but not switching 
> back to iTunes just reflects usage, I think. Originally when I used these 
> AppleScripts, I loaded them into the iTunes AppleScript menu instead of the 
> general AppleScript menu for the System.  Specifically, instead of putting 
> the AppleScripts into the folder on my account:
> ~/Library/Scripts/
> I put them into the folder:
> ~/Library/iTunes/Scripts
> And I had to create the Scripts folder the first time I added an AppleScript 
> under iTunes to the Library folder under my account.
> 
> The difference is that when you add scripts under a specific application, you 
> access the scripts menu in the menu bar of that application, while when you 
> add them to the general Library/Scripts folder you access them from the 
> services menu bar (VO-M-M or Control-F8, instead of VO-M or Control-F2), and 
> you can navigate to that menu from any application.  
> 
> I used to run these from iTunes, but some people like to use other 
> applications on their computer while listening to podcasts, iTunes U content, 
> or movies. So I switched the instructions to loading the AppleScripts to the 
> general scripts folder.  That way, you don't have to be in iTunes to start 
> and stop the podcast.   
> 
> I think that if you load these and use them under iTunes, using the Scripts 
> menu just before the "Help" menu on the iTunes menu bar (e.g., VO-M  then 
> VO-Left arrow twice to the menu), and return to normal speed from there, your 
> focus returns to iTunes.
> 
> By the way, I realized that I sent you these AppleScripts off list as email 
> attachments about half a year ago!  And slightly off topic,  I didn't realize 
> your recent viphone "Where To?" app use question was for the iPhone, because 
> the  new "pop up" menu design to email destinations only showed up in the 
> latest update -- it wasn't present in the version I have on my iPhone.
> 
> HTH.  Cheers,
> 
> Esther
> 
> On Aug 18, 2012, at 12:24, Marc Sutton wrote:
> 
>> And it works great. I noticed that Quicktime stays open when the "return to 
>> normal spped" script is launched, so you have to go back to itunes to pause 
>> speech. Is this the behavior designed in the script, or is something amuck?
>> Marc
>> 
>> On Aug 18, 2012, at 11:22 AM, Marc Sutton <marc...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi Again Esther,
>>> I found your apple script instructions further down the archive webpage. 
>>> Thanks for the detail and I am now putting it all together.
>>> Marc
>>> 
>>> On Aug 18, 2012, at 10:10 AM, Marc Sutton <marc...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Hi Esther,
>>>> Thank you for this tip. I downloaded an opml file of my podcast 
>>>> subscriptions into itunes. Do you know if they can be sorted into folders 
>>>> instead of one long list? Can you point me to a resource on how to build 
>>>> this apple script file? Thanks much.
>>>> Marc
>>>> 
>>>> On Aug 17, 2012, at 7:15 PM, Esther <mori...@mac.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> Hi Mark,
>>>>> 
>>>>> I use a couple of AppleScripts to speed up playback of tracks selected
>>>>> in iTunes and return to normal speed. iTunes itself doesn't support
>>>>> variable speed playback, but QuickTime Player, which it uses, does. So
>>>>> the scripts just pass the current position in the track to QuickTime
>>>>> Player, with the speed boost, and then back to iTunes at normal speed,
>>>>> so the track position can be kept.  I've used this method for several
>>>>> years. However, it's the older version of QuickTime, which is now
>>>>> dubbed "QuickTime 7", that has the easy access to A/V controls of
>>>>> pitch, speed, etc. that was used for the scripts, and while this still
>>>>> works (and provides different playback options -- all accessible
>>>>> through the GUI with VoiceOver), it's no longer included by default
>>>>> with operating system distributions starting with Lion; you have to
>>>>> download it separately.
>>>>> 
>>>>> If you're interested, I posted instructions on the Mac-access list
>>>>> earlier this year, and you can read the post in the mail archives:
>>>>> Speeding up podcasts on the Mac:
>>>>> http://www.mail-archive.com/mac-access%40mac-access.net/msg08057.html
>>>>> 
>>>>> HTH.  Cheers,
>>>>> 
>>>>> Esther
>>>>> 
>>>>> On Aug 17, 2:54 pm, Garth Humphreys <ghu...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>> I don't have a recommendation at the moment but I think I saw some 
>>>>>> reference in the twitter stream from down cast. He mentioned that he was 
>>>>>> working on a Mac app. I'll be very happy if so.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Sent from my iPhone
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On 18/08/2012, at 5:52, Marc Sutton <marc...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Hi Listers,
>>>>>> I use and enjoy Downcast on ios. Does anyone have recommendations for 
>>>>>> podcast apps on the Mac? Hopefully one that will allow speeding up of 
>>>>>> playback. Thanks.
>>>>>> Marc
>>>>>> 
> 
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