Hello to Apple Accessibility and List,
I am really pleased that you have responded on this list. Thanks so much. And as I mentioned to you yesterday, I was really pleased with your responce to me personally.
And I am really pleased with Apple's involvement in Accessibility.
I am sure this will go a long way to interest others in switching to the Mac environment. Again, a big public thanks to Apple's Accessibility group for all you've done and will be doing in the future.
Sincerely,
Dan Keys

On Nov 9, 2007, at 2:41 PM, Accessibility wrote:

Dear MacVisionaries:

Apple is delighted at the interest in VoiceOver shown on this list and that there is such an active group like MacVisionaries engaged in helping each other answer questions, discuss issues, and teach each other how they use VoiceOver. Apple is actively engaged with its customers and is eager to listen and encourages you to file bugs and send feedback and ask questions about Apple products.

Please be assured that every message sent to the [EMAIL PROTECTED] email address is read, and read by a person not a machine. As you might imagine, Apple gets a lot of email about a variety of subjects and while it may not be possible to respond to every letter, most senders to [EMAIL PROTECTED] get a response—even Dan Keys ;-)



Subject:
Re: Filing Accessibility-related Bugs with Apple
Date:
Thu, 8 Nov 2007 14:16:36 -0800
From:
Dan Keys <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To:
General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by the blind <[email protected]>
To:
General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by the blind <[email protected]>
References:
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Hello Rich and list,
I'd like to make an obxervation 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.



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