Thank you mark. I think we've decided that amazon prime is probably not for us
and amazon music doesn't offer enough classical and old music for us.
-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
M. Taylor
Sent: Friday, March 11, 2016
Hello Again Ari,
Well, I just spent over an hour with my Amazon online music library, IE11, and
Jaws for Windows, version 16.
I must tell you that my experience with using Jaws instead of Zoomtext was
vastly different and not, in my opinion, in a good way.
Now keep in mind that I am not an
Hello Ari,
I will keep this message in my Inbox to remind me to test the Amazon Cloud
Library with Jaws, tomorrow. I will post my findings afterwards.
Mark
-Original Message-
From: viphone@googlegroups.com [mailto:viphone@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of
englishride...@gmail.com
Sent:
Mark, i've had a horrible time trying to use the Amazon music downloader
program for Windows with NVDA. I haven't found the browser experience to be any
better. Have you tried using a screen reader instead of Zoom text to access
your music and downloaded from the web, without using the
Hello Larry,
I have not used the iOS Amazon Music app. However, I can tell you that the
Windows version of the app does not play nicely with ZoomText. In fact, I
recently installed it on my Windows 10 computer only to remove it about an hour
later.
To be honest, assuming that you are
The iOS app is accessible. I can't speak to the PC app, as I didn't even know
there was one. And my PC is so old, that it is probably not compatible with the
app. Besides, all the good stereo stuff I have is connected one way or another
through a Mac.
Mary
Sent from my iPhone
> On Mar 8,
I use Amazon Music pretty much exclusively through the iOS app using
VoiceOver. It is quite accessible with only a few querks. I found
using the Windows PC interface to be clunky for me using Window-Eyes.
HTH,
Jeff
At 07:02 PM 3/8/2016, you wrote:
The subject says it. Are the ios and pc apps