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I agree wit the bulk of what he says but I suspect he will still get abuse from the Apple Fanboys for whom Apple can do no wrong. I personally went into Mac in 2011 and invested heavily in it, both in terms of money and time to learn the OS and apps. I spent a lot of time producing Podcasts to assist people with using parts of of the OS. I was determined to find at least as much functionality on the Mac OS, as I had on Windows. My ambition was to leave Windows as my main computer and migrate as far as possible to the Mac and use that as my main machine. Unfortunately this did not prove to be possible and particularly during the period of submitting my PHD over 2012 and 2013 there was far too much clunkiness with accessibility for me to realistically use the Mac as my main machine. Some features after a long period were introduced, such as Table support in Pages, but by the time they had got that together I had to dive back into Word for over a year to get the bulk of my PhD written so suddenly switching to Pages made no sense at all. As far as I am aware there is no Mac based accessible Office Database solution, the previous otption of Bento having apparently broken accessibility some years ago. I also sadly found that things that were free or very cheap on Windows cost serious money the Mac side. Daisy reading support, free even with demo versions of Jaws, cost 3 figures on a Mac. The free otption on the mac, whose name I cannot recall was not a serious otption and rapidly ceased development. I spent quite a lot of money on app like IDEG Tag Edit but if I am honest these apps still cannot compete with the free Windows utilities like Mp3Tag for efficiency and ease of use. Accessibility Apps like GhostReader on the Mac lack basic functionality compared to Wimndows equivalents like TextAloud. I was surprised to find that Ghostreader could not even create an mp3 version of spoken text. When I contacted the developers about this they were unaware that many specialist Blind Talking Book players like the Plextalk devices did not support the m4a format they were outputting to. This sadly re-inforced to me that in many ways Apple driven development on the Mac was not for the mainstream but aimed more at the shiny and stylish and probably geeky. I like Jonathan find Apple Mail almost unusable in conversation thread view because of the tedious reading out of all recipeients before giving me the subject of an email. I do not use Classic view for other reasons. The only time I use Classic view is when I need to locate a mail sorted by sender with first letter navigation, though why they should not provide this functionality after all this time in modern view is still baffling to me. On most occasions I use Apple Mail on my Mac I have to restart Voiceover in order to regain proper cursor tracking when reviewing my email messages. Throughout the entire life of El Kapitan I was unable to use iBooks for reading as it constantly spat busy at me when I tried to interact with the reading area, though to be fair this does appear to have been fixed in Mac OS Sierra with busy far less common now, but it took over a year to fix what was a basic function for a blind person, reading properly electronic books on a Mac. It mayh be that my iMac machine is getting old now but it still has a 256 GB SSD and 16 GB of Ram along with a processor upgrade when the machine was purchased allied to an secondary 2 TB data internal drive .. Despite deliberately overinvesting in the hardware web surfing with Safari nowadays is a bit of a nightmare. I am constantly assailed by Voiceover announcing busy or Voiceover restarting itself. When I got my Mac in 2011 with Lion Safari was pretty much a joy to use, fast and rapid in its execution. Like Jonathan I still enjoy the Reader function but even this is far more laggy than it used to be. The rest is a bit shakey. When I first got my Mac reading PDF was pretty easy, though support for tagbged elements was not there. All through El Kapitan I found it impossible to use Preview, no matter how many times I interacted with the text and in the end resorted to using Nisus Writer Pro for reading PDF documents. I recently trialled PDF Pen Pro but considered it so far short of free options on Windows it would be ridiculous to purchase it. there is no doubt that I love using Mars Edit but I now conclude, again like Jonathan, that it is ipossible to reliably create blogs with it. I now routinely create my blogs in Word on Windows. Save to iCloud Drive, open in TextEdit and then copy and paste directly into Mars Edit for publishing. However I did not pay over £2,000 in 2011 for a machine where I had to undertake these clumsy work arounds for an accessible experience. David Griffith -----Original Message----- From: Dane Trethowan [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: 24 November 2016 12:41 To: [email protected] Subject: [Techno-Chat]: Article: Saying Goodbye to the Mac – Mosen Consulting Yet again another interesting and thought provoking post from Jonathan. I use a Mac Mini here though not exclusively. Whilst I don't do a lot of the sort of work Jonathan does I can see many of his points, I agree with some and disagree with others however - as Jonathan states - everyone needs to make the choices in technology that are best for them. Can I see the day when I myself will be parting with my Mac machine? That's a difficult question to anser I work pretty much 50-50 on both Mac and Windows machines and I also have a Virtual Windows machine set up on my Mac Mini from which I work. I've integrated all my machines and devices as best I can which helps. Anyway enjoy the read, its rather a lengthy one but worth the time and trouble to read. http://mosen.org/saying-goodbye-to-the-mac/ -- ********** “Oh, I’m an activist and I’m OK / I sleep all night and I tweet all day.”
