The process of taking screen shots of the controls in various states, creating 
multi-stage macros which verify the state of controls and give speech feedback 
of the state of those controls and testing those macros, adjusting them, etc. 
takes a lot of time and I guarantee that Focusrite will not hang out for hours 
while this is taking place. Grabbing a few coordinates isn't enough. The 
solution itself is feasible but would take a bunch of work. It's more realistic 
to rely on local sighted assistance that you can access a couple of times 
throughout the process. I'm willing to help with the process but anyone wanting 
to take it on needs to understand exactly how the software works, what's going 
on visually and should expect that it'll take a bunch of time. 
> On Sep 14, 2017, at 4:34 AM, TheOreoMonster <monkeypushe...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Yes I have had Focusrite support remote in and set up  Focusrite Control, and 
> pair the iOS app. Also saved presets for different scenarios I was likely to 
> use before the iOS app was available. All that is great but there have been 
> times I wanted to change or set up an interface for the first time outside of 
> support hours . Would be curious to see if they would stay on the call long 
> enough to do an extensive keyboard maestro set.  That being said It would be 
> nice if more interface went the route of the Behringer UMC or the AudioFuse. 
> All single knob/button per  control on the hardware and all the routing can 
> be done from your DAW. The AudioFuse Latency is supposed to be down to 3ms, 
> so I suppose its as good as USB is gonna get, and should be low enough to 
> track through plug ins without issues. 
> 
> 
>> On Sep 14, 2017, at 3:56 AM, Phil Muir <i...@accessibilitytraining.co.uk> 
>> wrote:
>> 
>> Well if you had the Focusrite hardware you could then call technical
>> support.  They are quite happy to remote into your machine with Team viewer
>> and no doubt would help create an accessible solution for their software
>> with Keyboard Maestro.  Had them take a look on machines here and they are
>> always happy to help.
>> 
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: ptaccess@googlegroups.com [mailto:ptaccess@googlegroups.com] On Behalf
>> Of TheOreoMonster
>> Sent: 14 September 2017 04:14
>> To: ptaccess@googlegroups.com
>> Subject: Re: question about new audio interface for traveling purposes and
>> good microphone suggestions
>> 
>> The second gen scarlet and the Clarett are using the same control software.
>> The difficulty  with Keyboard Maestro may be if it shows a different
>> interface for each device type. Any idea if the Element Mac software is
>> accessible or will we have to rely on the iOS software? 
>>> On Sep 13, 2017, at 6:38 PM, Slau Halatyn <slauhala...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Apogee Element is a bit more expensive but 8 I/O and the iOS app is
>> accessible. regarding the focusrite panel, I can probably make it pretty
>> accessible through Keyboard Maestro. Curious if the Scarlet and Claret
>> panels are the same. My brother just got one of those and I can probably
>> grab it for testing purposes for the software.
>>> 
>>> Slau
>>> 
>>>> On Sep 13, 2017, at 6:12 PM, Steve Martin <monkeypushe...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Portable and 8 combi inputs? Not sure that exist as anything with that
>> many inputs usually ends up being atleast 1 rack space, or a larger desktop
>> format. THe Focusrite Clarett 4 pre has 8 inputs but only 4 are mic/line.
>> The other 4 are just line inputs. Also it relies on the Focusrite control
>> software for switching between line and instrument level on the first two
>> inputs, Switching between the standard mic pres or the ones designed after
>> their ISA preamps, and switching on the High Pass Filter. In my experience
>> the iOS app was accessible with the 8prex so i assume the 4pre would work
>> with it accessibly as well. The Mac app is not accessible last i looked.
>> Regarding the mic, BLUE looks to be doing a buy one get one free on the
>> Hummingbird till end of december. Not sure if they have switchable polar
>> patterns but they seem well reviewed so may be worth a look especially
>> considering the price for two during the promotion. 
>>>> 
>>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>> 
>>>>> On Sep 13, 2017, at 4:51 PM, Nick Gawronski <n...@nickgawronski.com>
>> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi, I have been waiting until I really want to do some work before
>> buying a new interface as my Digi 003 is rather large and it probably won't
>> be supported much longer so I want to get something before that happenss.  I
>> would like around 8 inputs that are preferabley the combo jacks that can
>> take both XLR and quarter inch connections.  I am not set on a brand as long
>> as I can effectively use it with Pro Tools 12 or higher.  I would like
>> something that is easy to configure and can be taken places when I travel.
>> For my microphone suggestion I would like a microphone that is able to
>> switch between picking up everything in a room and just around the front of
>> it or is it better to buy two different microphones for this purpose?  Again
>> I am not for any brand just as long as it is not one of those fall apart
>> microphones and works well.  USB or thunderbolt connections probably
>> thunderbolt is best as that is what the future is going to version two of
>> thunderbolt or better probably is best but if it only supports version one
>> that is fine I want to buy for the future. Anymore questions please ask.  I
>> am going to look into a control surface as well would think it is best if
>> that is not part of the interface and if there is one that has automated
>> controls that move when Pro Tools moves the fadors and supports changing
>> plugin settings that would be nice.  Nick Gawronski
>>>>> 
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