Let me just add to this, if you will, that my first help with VO
came from someone at an Apple Store in the Bay Area. I also won't
generalize either. I personally have had good luck with
particularly,apple store employees, so I do hope that that not only
continues, but improves, for everyone...
Have a great day y'all!...
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Nov 9, 2007, at 9:51 AM, John Panarese wrote:
Actually, I do have to jump in here, as you are generalizing a
bit too much. Without a doubt, Apple needs to get their people up
to speed in a lot of areas in regard to VoiceOver, but I have heard
of several people who have, indeed, gotten tech support from Apple
tech support and Apple Care for VO questions. In addition, I
personally know of Apple Stores that are actively seeking training
for their staff on VoiceOver. My local store, in fact, has two
people who can use VO and answer questions. Not the norm, I know,
but please do not make blanket statements that lack complete accuracy.
Take Care
John Panarese
On Nov 9, 2007, at 8:47 AM, VaShaun Jones wrote:
Sorry, but who can you call for VO help? Surely not Apple. I think
most of you guys are stuck in your ways and will not admit that you
can't go to Apple to help with VO concerns. Most of the people who
use Mac on this list have unsubscribed because of the same attitude.
On Nov 9, 2007, at 8:15 AM, David Poehlman wrote:
give a man a fish, and he'll eat for a day, teach him to fish....
On Nov 8, 2007, at 9:38 PM, VaShaun Jones wrote:
Sorry, but since you have singled yourself out to specifically
answer, what exactly are you answering? It is common curtasy to
answer e-mails. What if they stop answering phone calls too? If
you have a product you should support it. As far as how long it
takes, who cares how long it takes? You have always carried your
responses in a do it yourself/read the help/ don't you already
know/ duhh, stupid short answer kinda way. I have seen on numerous
occasions a new switcher or potential switcher ask a question and
we will break our necks to tell them how great the Mac is, but
when someone ask a simple question that you know the answer to,
you tell them it is obvious. You can't call Apple and get tech
help with VO nor can you e-mail them. They have the same views as
most of the people on this list and that is that it is in a
manual, in help or on the net so go find it. If someone talks bad
about Apple you all get mad and tell them to creteec there message
to put the Mac and VO in the best light possible instead of
letting them have there own view. I research for a living and on
my free time I use my Mac and often times turn to you guys for a
quick answer. I turn to you because you have already done the
research. I turn to you because I need your help and you talk down
to people who ask a question. My question to both David and Sheryl
in particular, is why?
On Nov 8, 2007, at 9:06 PM, David Poehlman wrote:
I'm answering this one. How much time is it taking, how much
time does it take to research a problem, write up the solution,.
I don't respond to emails when the solution to the issue is
evident.
On Nov 8, 2007, at 8:02 PM, VaShaun Jones wrote:
There is no excuse for not answering e-mails no matter the
company or status, bug fixes or not. If you submit a e-mail that
is valid, understandable and related to a issue, problem or
praise. The proper thing at a minimum is to respond. Trust me
that accessibility e-mail address is not the forum that the
developers are reading. Not responding to e-mails is ridiculous
On Nov 8, 2007, at 5:37 PM, David Poehlman wrote:
If you were sitting in there seat and had a choice of responding
to messages all day or fixing bugs, what would you do?
On Nov 8, 2007, at 5:16 PM, Dan Keys wrote:
Hello Rich and list,
I'd like to make an observation regarding my experiences with
Apple's Accessibility Group.
Never in the numerous times that I've written to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
have I ever got a responce. It would be better for someone to
respond to email, than to never respond. I know that a few
people have received replies from Apple's Accessibility group,
but I sure never have. It kind of gives the appearance that they
don't want anything to do with the customers who use Apple's
products, in particular, VoiceOver or any other accessibility
applications.
On Nov 8, 2007, at 1:53 PM, Rich Caloggero wrote:
I want to file a bug / suggestion with Apple, specifically
related to
Safari, VoiceOver, and Webkit. Should I simply send eMail to
[EMAIL PROTECTED], or should I goto the webkit.org site
and use their
bug tracking system?
I guess what I'm really asking is: which software is controling
the behavior
I see with respect to VoiceOver and the web (Safari, Webkit, or
VoiceOver)?
I assume that there is no simple answer to this question, and
that to some
extent all three are involved.
A related question: if I send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED],
are there
guidelines or a certain form the message must follow, aside
from the usual:
include specific version numbers of all components, provide
test cases, be
clear about what the problem is, and provide clear steps to
reproduce?
Thanx much in advance.
-- Rich