I think I've only used it once
On 24 Oct 2007, at 00:27, Jane Jordan (gmail) wrote:
Nope. No built-in iSight canera, this wasn an iBook purchased in
2005, purchased in May, got it in June. Or something. It's in my
LiveJournal somewhere. Anyhow, no built-in camera. But I do have
bluetooth, since someomne thought I might need it, and you know, I
have not used it once.
Jane
On Oct 23, 2007, at 7:17 PM, James Austin wrote:
Do you not have an in-built camera?
On 24 Oct 2007, at 00:13, Jane Jordan (gmail) wrote:
The one thing I really were accessible probablyu won't be,not
because of lack of accessibility in VoiceOver, but because I
don't have a camera. I want one, too. Not that I can see
anyone, but I imagine I have family that would like to see me.
But now that I think about it, would a camera really be necessary
to "share" or take control of a Mac computer?
Jane
On Oct 23, 2007, at 11:02 AM, James Austin wrote:
Good point David but I think if I like Leopard, I will be
leaving my Tiger disc at home, and just keeping the Leopard
discs with me at University.
The guided tour seemed to have a lot that if accessible to us
could be very useful.
Best Wishes
James Austin
On 23 Oct 2007, at 15:51, David Poehlman wrote:
I would not dispense with my old discs, especially if they came
with you
computer. you may need stuff off them like the user guide for
your
computer. You may decide you hate leopard and want to go back.
using the c key is the same as clicking install macosx when you
put in the
cd but sure, you can do that if you like.
----- Original Message -----
From: "James Austin" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of
Mac OS X by
theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 23, 2007 10:28 AM
Subject: Leopard CD is a disc all of its own
Hi folks,
I have just finished listening to the guided tour of Leopard. A
number of things confused me.
1. Is the Leopard disc simply an upgrade disc or is it a full
operating system, i.e. can I simply keep this disc with me
instead of
carrying around my tiger discs as well? Well i spoke to the Apple
centre here in Cardiff, and they informed me that it was a
complete
installation disc. So just in case anyone else was as confused
as I
was, you can dispense with your old Tiger discs if you wish
when you
purchase Leopard.
2. Instead of simply running the installation from within
Tiger, can
we simply hold down the "C" key on the keyboard when we insert the
disc and it will boot as normal into the Leopard installation?
3. John (the guy in the presentation), said that we could browse
other Macs/PCs if they were on our network, I am assuming that you
need the other user's password if you want to gain any further
aces
than just what is publicly available
Thanks
Take care all
James