try either Sonar Producer or Studio version 8.5.2; much more joy with
window-eyes out of the box.
best
Roy.
www.soundclick.com/tzackeek
----- Original Message -----
From: "J.J. Meddaugh" <j...@bestmidi.com>
To: <gw-scripting@gwmicro.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2010 9:38 PM
Subject: Re: Reaper
I'm indifferent, just want either to work. I must have had bad Sonar
experiences in the past.
J.J. Meddaugh - ATGuys.com
A premier Licensed Code Factory and KNFB Reader distributor
----- Original Message -----
From: "Stephen Clower" <st...@steve-audio.net>
To: <gw-scripting@gwmicro.com>
Sent: Saturday, January 09, 2010 2:32 PM
Subject: Re: Reaper
I'm still a Sonar fan, but I'd be willing to take a look at Reaper also.
Steve
On 1/9/2010 1:53 PM, Aaron Smith wrote:
I use Reaper at home, but honestly never thought much about trying it
with Window-Eyes (talk about leaving work at work <grin>). I'll install
it at work next week, and see if there's anything useful we might be
able to do. I really like it as a multi-track recorder. It's painfully
easy, for example, to setup and use virtual synthesizers with just a
couple of clicks.
Aaron
On 1/9/2010 1:42 PM, J.J. Meddaugh wrote:
Has anyone heard of an audio editor called Reaper? It's apparently
multitrack and has some potential for accessibility. Someone ccreated
Jaws scripts which also use a .DLL so I'm trying to figure out their
approach.
The program has the ability to make just about anything, 1,800 keys in
all, keyboard shortcuts, so that's promising. If we can get it to read
the right info when keys are pressed, it would be a nice breakthrough.
Jaws scripts are here.
http://stash.reaper.fm/4398/reaper_screenreader.rar
They don't seem to do a ton.
So with all of the shortcut stuff, it's just a matter of getting it a
script to speak things.
The screen is quite crowded, so trying to figure out what's on it is
interesting.