Thanks David Taylor,
I am still considered fluctuating low vision. So I have used the most
accessible browser for ten years. Was once Opera. It gave up
accessibility years ago, so I moved to Firefox for the NoSquint of 125%,
and set pages to a readable font, as well as adblock.
I'd need a microscope to use Safari. Figuring out where they moved
things I use is difficult. Of course, with VoiceOver, it will do it for
me. Sortof. I'll still have to write out step by step instructions to
find what I need, since I will no longer be able to scroll until I find
it. When opened Safari yesterday, it had me logged into Twitter already.
I didn't have to type my password or anyhing. I actually don't like that,
if someone picked up my computer, they could into it. Plus,. it's always
been a security issue to not have cookies closed and deleted at the end of
a browsing session. I have no idea how to set Safari to do that.
Thanks for your suggestions,
April
On Saturday, January 11, 2014 9:11:32 AM UTC-5, David Taylor wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I would suggest a different approach. You should read the Getting Started
> Guide which is also in the help menu, and learn to use the commands help
> which is in the same place, or vi-h-h, in other words, hold down the vo
> keys and press h twice. This would explain much of this to you, and if you
> understand the logic, you’ll understand the terms. VO works well with
> Google Chrome, but not Firefox, you happened to pick an external browser
> which is not accessible, rather than start with what is built in, which is
> always the best way with Apple. You can do so much without getting any
> external apps and Apple ones often work best for most things for most
> people. Hope this helps.
>
> Cheers
> Dave
>
> On 11 Jan 2014, at 11:34 am, April Brown <[email protected]<javascript:>>
> wrote:
>
> Hi Eileen,
>
> Thanks. I had run the tutorial three times. And nowhere did it mention
> that I had to use a specific browser. It's also not very intuitive. I'm
> going to create my own step-by-step manual, Because there's no way I will
> remember any of those key combinations. I simply don't have the memory.
> It's going to be slow, and I'll work on it a little bit four or five days a
> week. I don't even know what half the terms mean. And I can't find the
> definition anywhere. Strange terms that aren't used in regular computer
> work such as auto web spot, web rotor, web spot, sweet spot. I have no
> idea what these terms mean, or if I need to use them, or how, or why. And
> that is to design websites. I can only imagine how somebody who has barely
> checked their e-mail and maybe Facebook would feel looking at this.
>
> Have a great day,
>
> April
>
> On Friday, January 10, 2014 4:49:41 PM UTC-5, Eileen Misrahi wrote:
>>
>> Hi April,
>>
>> I thought I would mention this to you. I have only had my MacBook Air for
>> a little over 4 months. when I first started, I accessed the Voiceover help
>> menu by pressing CONTROL-OPTION-H. This is the command to open Voiceover
>> help. If you arrow down to a submenu item called "Quick Start Tutorial," it
>> will present you with an interactive tutorial. The other item in the
>> Voiceover help menu that I have gone back to periodically is the "Getting
>> Started Manual" for Voiceover.
>>
>> there is also a Voiceover command help menu. This is accessed by pressing
>> CONTROL-OPTION-H-H (tapping the H twice quickly) This will open a submenu
>> of different categories such as general, keyboard, navigation, etc. When
>> you enter on one of these submenu items, it will open and delineate the
>> keystroke command and its description of what the command does. At the
>> beginning of all of this, I used this the most to commit the keystrokes to
>> memory. Be kind to yourself. It will get better in time. I rarely turn my
>> PC on these days. It's only for the programs that I can't run on the Mac
>> that I reach for the PC. I know in time I will probably venture to place a
>> virtual machine on my air, but that's for another time in place. HTH.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Eileen
>>
>>
>>
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