Yes, the pop-up menus I described in Fusion are perfectly accessible  
and VoiceOver will read them so therefore you can change the options  
"on-the-fly" whilst your virtual machine is running or before you  
start running the virtual machine whilst in Fusion.

On 09/11/2007, at 11:24 AM, Darrell Shandrow wrote:

> Hi Dane,
>
> Are those menus popping up in Fusion accessible?  If so, does  
> VoiceOver or
> Window-Eyes read that info?
>
> Please visit http://BlindWebAccess.com and sign the petition asking  
> Yahoo!
> to make their CAPTCHA accessible!
> Darrell Shandrow - Accessibility Evangelist
> Information should be accessible to us without need of translation by
> another person.
> Blind Access Journal blog and podcast: http:// 
> www.blindaccessjournal.com
> Check out high quality telecommunications services at http:// 
> ld.net/?nu7i
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Dane Trethowan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "PC Audio Discussion List" <[email protected]>
> Sent: Thursday, November 08, 2007 5:09 PM
> Subject: Macbooks, they sound very nice
>
>
> Hi all!
> Just got my new Macbook yesterday and I have to say that I'm
> pleasantly surprised at how good they sound. I haven't determined
> exactly where the speakers are in the computer itself yet <lol>.
> I was actually warned against getting the new Macbook, I was told
> that the speakers were incredibly quiet and lacked bass, if the first
> point was true then this would have ben an issue for me as I have a
> hearing impairment and I may have had to consider using external
> speakers. I'm glad to say however that these things boast plenty of
> volume and plenty of dynamic range so bass or the top end isn't a
> problem, more than acceptable in my view for a notebook device.
> Now here's the really interesting bit as far as audio goes, like my
> Imac the Macbook has both analog and digital in and out for sound,
> I've played a DVD on this model and connected it directly to my
> surround-sound receiver which I reviewed here about 2 years ago,
> results were spectacular with all the surround-sound functionality
> working as it should. You can of course, connnect something like an
> Imic for added audio flexability, I will be doing this so that I can
> have one device dedicated to record/playback and the other completely
> devoted to speekc, system sounds, playing audio "on-the-fly" and so
> forth, the excellent recording software Audio Hijack Pro and the
> excellent audio editing software Sound Studio will of course be an
> absolute must for this notebook too.
> FInally, I'm using Fusion to run a WIndows XP virtual machine with
> Window-eyes and no problem with audio either though you have to tell
> Fusion when you've plugged in the Imic if you want to use it with
> Windows XP and associated software such as Winamp or Total Recorder,
> this is done through a menu which pops up in fusion, these menus pop
> up for all connected devices to your Macbook and give you choices on
> how you want Fusion and Windows XP to connect to them, I think
> there's an "auto-detect" mode somewhere in there too.
> Hope this was of interest to some people, I could go further in my
> discussion of the Macbook but... welll... this is an audio list <lol>
>
>
>
>
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