Re: Using Google docs, etc., on mac with voiceover

2016-12-31 Thread Kat DeNicola
I’ll have to give it a try. … I’m writing this an hour away from the new year… I guess I have no life. LOL Kat * “Dogs are our link to paradise. They don't know evil or jealousy or discontent. To sit with a dog on a hillside on a glorious afternoon is to be back in Eden, where doing nothing

Re: Happy new year

2016-12-31 Thread Donna Goodin
Plus1 to that! Happy new year everyone! Cheers, Donna Sent from my iPhone > On Jan 1, 2017, at 12:08 AM, Scott Granados wrote: > > Here’s hoping everyone has a great 2017. > > Happy new year. > > > -- > The following information is important for all members of

Happy new year

2016-12-31 Thread Scott Granados
Here’s hoping everyone has a great 2017. Happy new year. -- The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries list. If you have any questions or concerns about the running of this list, or if you feel that a member's post is inappropriate, please contact the

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread 'Jason White' via MacVisionaries
Kevin Chao wrote: > Chrome beats Safari in performance, security, accessibility, and other > metrics. A further advantage is that it runs under Mac OS, Linux, Windows, Android and Chrome OS. Those of us who use multiple devices appreciate its ability to synchronize

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Kevin Chao
Chrome beats Safari in performance, security, accessibility, and other metrics. On Sat, Dec 31, 2016 at 3:09 PM Scott Granados wrote: > From what I’ve read as well, google chrome is much more efficient in power > use than safari. Safari is supposedly a big power draw.

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Scott Granados
>From what I’ve read as well, google chrome is much more efficient in power use >than safari. Safari is supposedly a big power draw. Some people are using >chrome in it’s place for better battery results. > On Dec 31, 2016, at 10:33 AM, Alex Hall wrote: > > From all I've

Re: My 10 Favorite iOS Apps of 2016

2016-12-31 Thread Mary Otten
Well, I agree about the financial apps. Mine are different, because my financial institutions are different, but the sentiment is the same. Not yet mentioned is the wonderful Twitterrific app, which has been my go to Twitter app for sometime now and continues to improve. Even though I have had

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Scott Granados
I got a similar response from accessibility as well as they did tell me they were working on a solution to bring the menu function back. Also +1 to Donna’s suggestion, the script is fantastic. > On Dec 30, 2016, at 9:36 PM, Alex Hall wrote: > > Apple Accessibility replied

Re: My 10 Favorite iOS Apps of 2016

2016-12-31 Thread Scott Granados
Kawal, if you want a really tight home automation tool, go with a Google home. Works with the nest as well as a lot of lighting systems and has great voice recognition. I’ve heard good things about the hive though, never used one. > On Dec 31, 2016, at 4:14 PM, Kawal Gucukoglu

Re: My 10 Favorite iOS Apps of 2016

2016-12-31 Thread Scott Granados
E.T. the banking IOS apps are far better than a full complicated web page. You get a nice clean interface, very easy to use anywhere and you can use your thumb print to unlock things instead of remembering a code. I love it myself. > On Dec 30, 2016, at 6:31 PM, E.T.

Re: My 10 Favorite iOS Apps of 2016

2016-12-31 Thread Scott Granados
Hi Mark, interesting topic and I have to agree with a lot of your choices. I use the Bank of America app and it’s absolutely fantastic. The wallet is also very very good and I love Apple Pay. I also think maps have become very usable. I’m a big +1 on the capital 1 app. I love how you

Game "A blind legend"

2016-12-31 Thread Jürgen Fleger
Hello, I stuck in „A blind legend“ in Level 20. After walking slowely around the guards room there’s this person who kills me all the time. I tried to protect my self with the pinch gesture and I tried to get my sword. Both seemed to be not possible. Could you help me to understand what’s

Re: My 10 Favorite iOS Apps of 2016

2016-12-31 Thread Kawal Gucukoglu
Well, I think this app will be my favourite in 2017 as I need to get my heating and hot water voice controlled. It's going to be the Hive as you will be able to control your heating and hot water using Siri and your I phone. I'm so looking forward to that. I also like using the Amazon app and

Re: Using Google docs, etc., on mac with voiceover

2016-12-31 Thread Kevin Chao
ChromeVox Next will be default in M56 of Chrome OS (ChromeBooks), which is targetted for January 2017. Chrome browser will *NOT* support ChromeVox Next, as there should be sufficient support by native platform screen readers (e.g. Mac VoiceOver, Windows NVDA). On Sat, Dec 31, 2016 at 9:11 AM

Re: speed test on Mac

2016-12-31 Thread Kevin Chao
Fast.com by Netflix It shows the download speed and is very accuracy and accessible. e.g. 230 Compare on SPEEDTEST.NET Mbps ? On Sat, Dec 31, 2016 at 9:28 AM Christina C. wrote: > Hello, > > What’s the best and easiest accessible way to

speed test on Mac

2016-12-31 Thread Christina C.
Hello, What’s the best and easiest accessible way to test my internet speed on my mac. I’ve tried speedtest.net and I can’t seem to access the part of the page to test my internet speed. Thanks, Christina -- The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries

Re: Using Google docs, etc., on mac with voiceover

2016-12-31 Thread Jonathan Cohn
Will Chrome VOX Next be available for the Chrome browser too? I haven't payed much attention to the progress of Next recently, but it had appeared they would be switching this on as a default in the next few months last time I looked. Best wishes, Jonathan Cohn > On Dec 28,

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Kevin Chao
I've been using AppleScript mapped to RIGHT_OPTION-B (it worked pre-Sierra and wasn't phased by .2): Say The Time: Similar to Apple’s time script, but speaks using VoiceOver’s default synth. https://blog.bryansmart.com/2014/07/24/some-scripts-for-voiceover/ On Sat, Dec 31, 2016 at 8:33 AM Chris

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Chris Meredith
Probably not the best idea in a meeting though, I expect. > On Dec 31, 2016, at 12:00 AM, 'Peggy' via MacVisionaries > wrote: > > I have a Macbook Air. I didn't have a problem checking battery status until I > updated my mac a couple of weeks ago. I use siri to

Re: movie audio description app

2016-12-31 Thread Tim Kilburn
Hi, So did I. Give it a few years and youngsters won't know what a paper route is either. Oh, the barrels of getting older. Later... Tim Kilburn Fort McMurray, AB Canada On Dec 30, 2016, at 20:25, Simon Fogarty wrote: Hell I was doing a paper delivery run at 11 or

Re: Importing cd's into itunes.

2016-12-31 Thread Tim Kilburn
Hi, Or a 45. Later... Tim Kilburn Fort McMurray, AB Canada On Dec 30, 2016, at 20:27, Simon Fogarty wrote: Just couldn’t resist. Try telling a 12 year old kid today what a cassette is, or real to real tape, they think we’re bloody crazy, From:

Re: My 10 Favorite iOS Apps of 2016

2016-12-31 Thread Tim Kilburn
Hi Simon, If you import your Audio Books into iTunes, they are available on your Apple TV for listening. You go to Computers, then your computer, then down to Audio Books. If the stars are aligned properly, it will also remember your location within the Audio Book if you continue listening

Re: My Macbook Pro 2010 battery and HD

2016-12-31 Thread Sarai Bucciarelli
So far, I’m very impressed at how fast apps load! I think it is worth it. I replaced the 500GB 7200 rpm hd with a 750 SSD. They gave me back the old hard drive. It is in a static proof bag. I put it in a drawer, just in case I ever needed it. It appears they restored al my data for me. Hoping

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Alex Hall
>From all I've read, it's not as simple as that. The new processors have two >modes, one high-power and one low-power, between which they switch constantly. >Thus, any battery time indicator on the new Pro will almost certainly be >inaccurate, because a few minutes at high power could be the

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Donna Goodin
Interesting. Maybe that's on the new Macs. On my 2013 MBA, Command space opens spotlight and option space brings up Siri. Cheers, Donna > On Dec 31, 2016, at 9:05 AM, Alex Hall wrote: > > I don't knowhow, but my new Pro is set to open Spotlight when you hit > cmd-space.

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Mike Arrigo
Command+space is actually the default spotlight command, you could change that in keyboard preferences, but that's the default. > On Dec 31, 2016, at 9:05 AM, Alex Hall wrote: > > I don't knowhow, but my new Pro is set to open Spotlight when you hit > cmd-space. If you hold

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Mike Arrigo
I've actually done some research on this, apparently Apple removed the time indicator from the battery menu because the new macbook pros were not getting the battery time that Apple claimed they should have. The seri idea is a good one, sounds like Apple may need to improve the battery on the

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Alex Hall
I don't knowhow, but my new Pro is set to open Spotlight when you hit cmd-space. If you hold that down for a second, though, Siri appears. Sent from my iPhone > On Dec 31, 2016, at 09:23, Donna Goodin wrote: > > One small correction, I think you mean Option+Space. :) >

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Donna Goodin
One small correction, I think you mean Option+Space. :) Cheers, Donna > On Dec 31, 2016, at 6:32 AM, Alex Hall wrote: > > As of Sierra, you can. Hold down cmd-space until you hear the tone, then > speak. As far as I can tell, this is like iOS in that you can keep holding >

Re: Playing a dvd with VO.

2016-12-31 Thread Stacey Robinson
Yes, it’s a dvd. Peace, Stacey Robinson and GEB dog Kirk. mailto:stacey...@bellsouth.net > On Dec 30, 2016, at 9:39 PM, Simon Fogarty wrote: > > Hi Stacey, > > Are you sure it's a DVD and not a blue Ray? > > They are very very

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread Alex Hall
As of Sierra, you can. Hold down cmd-space until you hear the tone, then speak. As far as I can tell, this is like iOS in that you can keep holding the keys down, or release them immediately and let Siri figure out, by a pause in your speaking, when you've finished your command. -- Alex Hall

Re: reading battery level in sierra, and a few other things

2016-12-31 Thread 'Eleanor Roberts' via MacVisionaries
Hi. This is all very helpful. Just out of interest, how do you use Siri on the Mac?? I use it on my IPhone etc all the time, but didn't know you could do it on Mac too. Thanks. Eleanor Sent from my iPad > On 31 Dec 2016, at 05:00, 'Peggy' via MacVisionaries >

RE: Using Google docs, etc., on mac with voiceover

2016-12-31 Thread Simon Fogarty
Hi Mary, Yeah it’s crazy so far all I’ve been able to confirm is AD and sub titles are the only things in the accessibilities menu under settings, Yeah from the home screan of the Samsung tv try holding down the mute key and see what happens, you may have to hold it down for a few seconds to