Re: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

2012-07-22 Thread Rachel Feinberg
This was an excellent post! Thanks for being so detailed in your description. 
Only one thing i'd add is once you interact with the scroll area, select the 
untitled 1 or 2 or however many partitions you have, with vO+command+f5. You 
can use VO+shift+space to perform a mouse click. That takes the necessity of 
physically clicking with the trackpad away from the equation. I find that 
sometimes this works, and sometimes it's good to turn voiceover off and on 
again after performing a mouse click, then rename the partition as desired.
Rachel 
On Jul 16, 2012, at 2:04 PM, Andrew Lamanche wrote:

 Dear listers,
 
 I thought I'd post my experience of partitioning an external usb drive
 under mac os Lion in case somebody else needed to do this in the
 future.
 
 I've bought a 1 TB external hard drive, and I wanted to partition it
 so that it has two different volumes. This is how I accomplished it in
 Mac OS Lion.
 
 I connected my USB drive to my mac.
 1. Open Disk Utility (from the finder, shortcut key, command+shift+u),
 and then start typing disk utility to get there.
 
 2. In the table of all available disks, find the disk you wish to partition.
 
 3. Stop interacting with the table of your disks and move to the right
 through the available tabs until you've reached partition tab. Press
 vo+space to select it.
 
 4. Move right to hear partition layout popup button. Here yo you can
 choose how many partitions you wish to have on your drive. In my case,
 I chose two partitions.
 
 5. Move to the right. You will encounter a field that Voiceover
 reports as something like name text field. At this stage this field
 will be reported as dimmed which means that you cannot do anything
 with it.
 
 6. Move to the right and yo you will hear scroll area. This is where
 it gets interesting. Remember, I chose to partition my external drive
 into two.
 
 7. Interact with the scroll area. You will be able to navigate with
 vo+arrow keys here, and you will hear: untitled1 plus some info about
 the value of the default size of the partition and if you move right,
 you will hear horizontal splitter and then, untitled2 with the
 value of the default size of the partition. At this point, you can't
 do anything with these areas. However, in order to be able to name
 your partitions, you have to do the following steps.
 
 8. While still interacting with the scroll area, place your Voiceover
 cursor on the first untitled area. If you have a mac that has a
 trackpad which by default is enabled with Voiceover, first disabled
 the trackpad commander with vo + rotor left. Voiceover will say
 trackpad commander off. Then bring your ouse cursor to the Voiceover
 cursor with vo+command+f5. Confirm with vo+f5 that you are on the
 untitled1 field and then physically click the mouse/trackpad.
 
 9. At this point, Disk Utility got busy for me and I had to force quit
 it. To avoid this, after you had physically clicked the mouse pad,
 turn Voiceover off and then on again (don't rush the process), and
 then stop interacting with the scroll area and move left to the name
 text field.
 
 10. You will notice, that now Voiceover announces name text field as
 untitled1 and it is not dimmed so that yo you can enter the name of
 your volume here.
 
 11. After you are done with this partition, interact with the scroll
 area again, only this time move to the untitled2 and perform the
 same actions here as you had done with untitled1'. Then again, as
 soon as you physically click the trackpad, turn Voiceover off, and
 then turn it on again, and then stop interacting with the scroll area
 and move to the left to the name field where you can now enter the
 name of your second volume.
 
 I hope this will help some people on the list who have been struggling
 to partition their external drives.
 
 With best regards
 
 Andrew
 
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RE: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

2012-07-17 Thread wayne coles
Yes thanks it is a great list here 

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Daniel McGee
Sent: 16 July 2012 22:46
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

Hello Andrew, very useful information for us Lion users. Thank you for
sharing. 
Just as a side note. It might be good if you could send an email to Apple's
accessibility address so they know about this problem. 

Daniel
On 16 Jul 2012, at 22:04, Andrew Lamanche wrote:

 Dear listers,
 
 I thought I'd post my experience of partitioning an external usb drive
 under mac os Lion in case somebody else needed to do this in the
 future.
 
 I've bought a 1 TB external hard drive, and I wanted to partition it
 so that it has two different volumes. This is how I accomplished it in
 Mac OS Lion.
 
 I connected my USB drive to my mac.
 1. Open Disk Utility (from the finder, shortcut key, command+shift+u),
 and then start typing disk utility to get there.
 
 2. In the table of all available disks, find the disk you wish to
partition.
 
 3. Stop interacting with the table of your disks and move to the right
 through the available tabs until you've reached partition tab. Press
 vo+space to select it.
 
 4. Move right to hear partition layout popup button. Here yo you can
 choose how many partitions you wish to have on your drive. In my case,
 I chose two partitions.
 
 5. Move to the right. You will encounter a field that Voiceover
 reports as something like name text field. At this stage this field
 will be reported as dimmed which means that you cannot do anything
 with it.
 
 6. Move to the right and yo you will hear scroll area. This is where
 it gets interesting. Remember, I chose to partition my external drive
 into two.
 
 7. Interact with the scroll area. You will be able to navigate with
 vo+arrow keys here, and you will hear: untitled1 plus some info about
 the value of the default size of the partition and if you move right,
 you will hear horizontal splitter and then, untitled2 with the
 value of the default size of the partition. At this point, you can't
 do anything with these areas. However, in order to be able to name
 your partitions, you have to do the following steps.
 
 8. While still interacting with the scroll area, place your Voiceover
 cursor on the first untitled area. If you have a mac that has a
 trackpad which by default is enabled with Voiceover, first disabled
 the trackpad commander with vo + rotor left. Voiceover will say
 trackpad commander off. Then bring your ouse cursor to the Voiceover
 cursor with vo+command+f5. Confirm with vo+f5 that you are on the
 untitled1 field and then physically click the mouse/trackpad.
 
 9. At this point, Disk Utility got busy for me and I had to force quit
 it. To avoid this, after you had physically clicked the mouse pad,
 turn Voiceover off and then on again (don't rush the process), and
 then stop interacting with the scroll area and move left to the name
 text field.
 
 10. You will notice, that now Voiceover announces name text field as
 untitled1 and it is not dimmed so that yo you can enter the name of
 your volume here.
 
 11. After you are done with this partition, interact with the scroll
 area again, only this time move to the untitled2 and perform the
 same actions here as you had done with untitled1'. Then again, as
 soon as you physically click the trackpad, turn Voiceover off, and
 then turn it on again, and then stop interacting with the scroll area
 and move to the left to the name field where you can now enter the
 name of your second volume.
 
 I hope this will help some people on the list who have been struggling
 to partition their external drives.
 
 With best regards
 
 Andrew
 
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 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
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Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

2012-07-16 Thread Andrew Lamanche
Dear listers,

I thought I'd post my experience of partitioning an external usb drive
under mac os Lion in case somebody else needed to do this in the
future.

I've bought a 1 TB external hard drive, and I wanted to partition it
so that it has two different volumes. This is how I accomplished it in
Mac OS Lion.

I connected my USB drive to my mac.
1. Open Disk Utility (from the finder, shortcut key, command+shift+u),
and then start typing disk utility to get there.

2. In the table of all available disks, find the disk you wish to partition.

3. Stop interacting with the table of your disks and move to the right
through the available tabs until you've reached partition tab. Press
vo+space to select it.

4. Move right to hear partition layout popup button. Here yo you can
choose how many partitions you wish to have on your drive. In my case,
I chose two partitions.

5. Move to the right. You will encounter a field that Voiceover
reports as something like name text field. At this stage this field
will be reported as dimmed which means that you cannot do anything
with it.

6. Move to the right and yo you will hear scroll area. This is where
it gets interesting. Remember, I chose to partition my external drive
into two.

7. Interact with the scroll area. You will be able to navigate with
vo+arrow keys here, and you will hear: untitled1 plus some info about
the value of the default size of the partition and if you move right,
you will hear horizontal splitter and then, untitled2 with the
value of the default size of the partition. At this point, you can't
do anything with these areas. However, in order to be able to name
your partitions, you have to do the following steps.

8. While still interacting with the scroll area, place your Voiceover
cursor on the first untitled area. If you have a mac that has a
trackpad which by default is enabled with Voiceover, first disabled
the trackpad commander with vo + rotor left. Voiceover will say
trackpad commander off. Then bring your ouse cursor to the Voiceover
cursor with vo+command+f5. Confirm with vo+f5 that you are on the
untitled1 field and then physically click the mouse/trackpad.

9. At this point, Disk Utility got busy for me and I had to force quit
it. To avoid this, after you had physically clicked the mouse pad,
turn Voiceover off and then on again (don't rush the process), and
then stop interacting with the scroll area and move left to the name
text field.

10. You will notice, that now Voiceover announces name text field as
untitled1 and it is not dimmed so that yo you can enter the name of
your volume here.

11. After you are done with this partition, interact with the scroll
area again, only this time move to the untitled2 and perform the
same actions here as you had done with untitled1'. Then again, as
soon as you physically click the trackpad, turn Voiceover off, and
then turn it on again, and then stop interacting with the scroll area
and move to the left to the name field where you can now enter the
name of your second volume.

I hope this will help some people on the list who have been struggling
to partition their external drives.

With best regards

Andrew

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Re: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

2012-07-16 Thread Daniel McGee
Hello Andrew, very useful information for us Lion users. Thank you for sharing. 
Just as a side note. It might be good if you could send an email to Apple's 
accessibility address so they know about this problem. 

Daniel
On 16 Jul 2012, at 22:04, Andrew Lamanche wrote:

 Dear listers,
 
 I thought I'd post my experience of partitioning an external usb drive
 under mac os Lion in case somebody else needed to do this in the
 future.
 
 I've bought a 1 TB external hard drive, and I wanted to partition it
 so that it has two different volumes. This is how I accomplished it in
 Mac OS Lion.
 
 I connected my USB drive to my mac.
 1. Open Disk Utility (from the finder, shortcut key, command+shift+u),
 and then start typing disk utility to get there.
 
 2. In the table of all available disks, find the disk you wish to partition.
 
 3. Stop interacting with the table of your disks and move to the right
 through the available tabs until you've reached partition tab. Press
 vo+space to select it.
 
 4. Move right to hear partition layout popup button. Here yo you can
 choose how many partitions you wish to have on your drive. In my case,
 I chose two partitions.
 
 5. Move to the right. You will encounter a field that Voiceover
 reports as something like name text field. At this stage this field
 will be reported as dimmed which means that you cannot do anything
 with it.
 
 6. Move to the right and yo you will hear scroll area. This is where
 it gets interesting. Remember, I chose to partition my external drive
 into two.
 
 7. Interact with the scroll area. You will be able to navigate with
 vo+arrow keys here, and you will hear: untitled1 plus some info about
 the value of the default size of the partition and if you move right,
 you will hear horizontal splitter and then, untitled2 with the
 value of the default size of the partition. At this point, you can't
 do anything with these areas. However, in order to be able to name
 your partitions, you have to do the following steps.
 
 8. While still interacting with the scroll area, place your Voiceover
 cursor on the first untitled area. If you have a mac that has a
 trackpad which by default is enabled with Voiceover, first disabled
 the trackpad commander with vo + rotor left. Voiceover will say
 trackpad commander off. Then bring your ouse cursor to the Voiceover
 cursor with vo+command+f5. Confirm with vo+f5 that you are on the
 untitled1 field and then physically click the mouse/trackpad.
 
 9. At this point, Disk Utility got busy for me and I had to force quit
 it. To avoid this, after you had physically clicked the mouse pad,
 turn Voiceover off and then on again (don't rush the process), and
 then stop interacting with the scroll area and move left to the name
 text field.
 
 10. You will notice, that now Voiceover announces name text field as
 untitled1 and it is not dimmed so that yo you can enter the name of
 your volume here.
 
 11. After you are done with this partition, interact with the scroll
 area again, only this time move to the untitled2 and perform the
 same actions here as you had done with untitled1'. Then again, as
 soon as you physically click the trackpad, turn Voiceover off, and
 then turn it on again, and then stop interacting with the scroll area
 and move to the left to the name field where you can now enter the
 name of your second volume.
 
 I hope this will help some people on the list who have been struggling
 to partition their external drives.
 
 With best regards
 
 Andrew
 
 -- 
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
 MacVisionaries group.
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 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
 macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
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RE: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

2012-07-16 Thread Jesus Garcia
Great thanks this is very good information to hang on to. Though as someone
said in a subsequent post it would be nice if they fix the access issue
here. Again thanks for posting the steps.

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Andrew Lamanche
Sent: Monday, July 16, 2012 17:04
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

Dear listers,

I thought I'd post my experience of partitioning an external usb drive under
mac os Lion in case somebody else needed to do this in the future.

I've bought a 1 TB external hard drive, and I wanted to partition it so that
it has two different volumes. This is how I accomplished it in Mac OS Lion.

I connected my USB drive to my mac.
1. Open Disk Utility (from the finder, shortcut key, command+shift+u), and
then start typing disk utility to get there.

2. In the table of all available disks, find the disk you wish to partition.

3. Stop interacting with the table of your disks and move to the right
through the available tabs until you've reached partition tab. Press
vo+space to select it.

4. Move right to hear partition layout popup button. Here yo you can
choose how many partitions you wish to have on your drive. In my case, I
chose two partitions.

5. Move to the right. You will encounter a field that Voiceover reports as
something like name text field. At this stage this field will be reported
as dimmed which means that you cannot do anything with it.

6. Move to the right and yo you will hear scroll area. This is where it
gets interesting. Remember, I chose to partition my external drive into two.

7. Interact with the scroll area. You will be able to navigate with
vo+arrow keys here, and you will hear: untitled1 plus some info about
the value of the default size of the partition and if you move right, you
will hear horizontal splitter and then, untitled2 with the value of the
default size of the partition. At this point, you can't do anything with
these areas. However, in order to be able to name your partitions, you have
to do the following steps.

8. While still interacting with the scroll area, place your Voiceover cursor
on the first untitled area. If you have a mac that has a trackpad which by
default is enabled with Voiceover, first disabled the trackpad commander
with vo + rotor left. Voiceover will say trackpad commander off. Then bring
your ouse cursor to the Voiceover cursor with vo+command+f5. Confirm with
vo+f5 that you are on the
untitled1 field and then physically click the mouse/trackpad.

9. At this point, Disk Utility got busy for me and I had to force quit it.
To avoid this, after you had physically clicked the mouse pad, turn
Voiceover off and then on again (don't rush the process), and then stop
interacting with the scroll area and move left to the name text field.

10. You will notice, that now Voiceover announces name text field as
untitled1 and it is not dimmed so that yo you can enter the name of your
volume here.

11. After you are done with this partition, interact with the scroll area
again, only this time move to the untitled2 and perform the same actions
here as you had done with untitled1'. Then again, as soon as you physically
click the trackpad, turn Voiceover off, and then turn it on again, and then
stop interacting with the scroll area and move to the left to the name
field where you can now enter the name of your second volume.

I hope this will help some people on the list who have been struggling to
partition their external drives.

With best regards

Andrew

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Re: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover

2012-07-16 Thread Harry Hogue
I really appreciate this information, Andrew.  I will give this a try.

Harry

On Jul 16, 2012, at 5:30 PM, Jesus Garcia wrote:

 Great thanks this is very good information to hang on to. Though as someone
 said in a subsequent post it would be nice if they fix the access issue
 here. Again thanks for posting the steps.
 
 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Andrew Lamanche
 Sent: Monday, July 16, 2012 17:04
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Partitioning an external drive under mac os Lion with Voiceover
 
 Dear listers,
 
 I thought I'd post my experience of partitioning an external usb drive under
 mac os Lion in case somebody else needed to do this in the future.
 
 I've bought a 1 TB external hard drive, and I wanted to partition it so that
 it has two different volumes. This is how I accomplished it in Mac OS Lion.
 
 I connected my USB drive to my mac.
 1. Open Disk Utility (from the finder, shortcut key, command+shift+u), and
 then start typing disk utility to get there.
 
 2. In the table of all available disks, find the disk you wish to partition.
 
 3. Stop interacting with the table of your disks and move to the right
 through the available tabs until you've reached partition tab. Press
 vo+space to select it.
 
 4. Move right to hear partition layout popup button. Here yo you can
 choose how many partitions you wish to have on your drive. In my case, I
 chose two partitions.
 
 5. Move to the right. You will encounter a field that Voiceover reports as
 something like name text field. At this stage this field will be reported
 as dimmed which means that you cannot do anything with it.
 
 6. Move to the right and yo you will hear scroll area. This is where it
 gets interesting. Remember, I chose to partition my external drive into two.
 
 7. Interact with the scroll area. You will be able to navigate with
 vo+arrow keys here, and you will hear: untitled1 plus some info about
 the value of the default size of the partition and if you move right, you
 will hear horizontal splitter and then, untitled2 with the value of the
 default size of the partition. At this point, you can't do anything with
 these areas. However, in order to be able to name your partitions, you have
 to do the following steps.
 
 8. While still interacting with the scroll area, place your Voiceover cursor
 on the first untitled area. If you have a mac that has a trackpad which by
 default is enabled with Voiceover, first disabled the trackpad commander
 with vo + rotor left. Voiceover will say trackpad commander off. Then bring
 your ouse cursor to the Voiceover cursor with vo+command+f5. Confirm with
 vo+f5 that you are on the
 untitled1 field and then physically click the mouse/trackpad.
 
 9. At this point, Disk Utility got busy for me and I had to force quit it.
 To avoid this, after you had physically clicked the mouse pad, turn
 Voiceover off and then on again (don't rush the process), and then stop
 interacting with the scroll area and move left to the name text field.
 
 10. You will notice, that now Voiceover announces name text field as
 untitled1 and it is not dimmed so that yo you can enter the name of your
 volume here.
 
 11. After you are done with this partition, interact with the scroll area
 again, only this time move to the untitled2 and perform the same actions
 here as you had done with untitled1'. Then again, as soon as you physically
 click the trackpad, turn Voiceover off, and then turn it on again, and then
 stop interacting with the scroll area and move to the left to the name
 field where you can now enter the name of your second volume.
 
 I hope this will help some people on the list who have been struggling to
 partition their external drives.
 
 With best regards
 
 Andrew
 
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