Mitchell is right. I too always upgrade. Sometimes, as in JAWS 13, I upgrade but never use it. For instance, with JAWS 13, I used version 12 until version 14 came out. For my dime, I thought JAWS 13 broke more than it fixed, and sometimes versions of software will do that. Still, it is such a hassle skipping versions that it makes sense, at least for me, always to keep up to date.
-----Original Message----- From: Jfw [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michal Nowicki via Jfw Sent: Monday, June 22, 2015 9:39 PM To: 'The Jaws for Windows support list.' Cc: Michal Nowicki Subject: RE: Keeping Up With Technology "Skipping five or so versions" is not cheaper if, all of a sudden, a new version comes out containing something you really want or need. It would be cheaper if FS charged a flat upgrade fee, but that's not the case; the older the version, the greater the cost of upgrading to the newest release. That is why I always keep my license up-to-date, even if a particular release does not contain any new features I feel I'll need. -----Original Message----- From: JFW [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Brad Martin via Jfw Sent: Monday, June 22, 2015 8:34 PM To: The Jaws for Windows support list. Cc: Brad Martin Subject: Re: Keeping Up With Technology I can't really fault Freedom Scientific for this. Designers do crazier and crazier things with software and websites every day, and the people at FS aren't psychic. It's been this way since before I got into computers I'm sure, and that was 1992. You can't redesign software to fix a problem until the problem exists. So what happens. A new version of Windows comes out, and then JAWS has to be rewritten to handle the new stuff. A new version of Office comes out replacing menus with ribbons, and again, the software has to be rewritten to deal with the new layout. Netflix changes their website, and again something has to be tweaked to handle the new wrinkle. If the site designer would use Alt tags on their graphics, graphical links wouldn't be an issue. The other side of that coin is that you have to do your part, and that means updating to the latest version of JAWS if you want the latest fixes to the latest problems. I don't generally update to every new release, because for what I do, I can usually skip five or so versions. It's cheaper that way, and I don't feel like I'm missing out. If you're more on the cutting edge of technology, you may have to update more frequently. Which brings me to my final point of the night. People gripe about the cost of assistive technology, but as rapidly as things change, programmers are always having to work writing code to accommodate those new features and problems. And unlike, say, Microsoft Office, which people use by the millions and millions of copies, assistive technology has an extremely small market share. People want the very latest and greatest, and they want the software authors to work for free. Is what we have perfect? No. But if you were using JAWS back in the days of Internet Explorer 3.0, you remember when the only way to read a news article was with the JAWS cursor (there was no virtual cursor), and you had to read three or four columns of articles at one time with all the stories mixed together. We've come soooooo far since 1997 when I started teaching people how to use the Internet. When you step back eighteen years, it's really quite amazing how rapidly our technology catches up with the rest of the world compared to how long it used to take. Brad On 6/22/2015 6:25 PM, Kevin Wollenweber via Jfw wrote: > You know, with all the hardships that I read within this EList, > especially regarding Netflix and other such sites-I know I'm having my > share of woes regarding these-I think the fault lay not only with > sites like Netflix that change configurations as often as they change > their underwear, but also with Freedom Scientific for not keeping the > programs compatible and current with a lot of new programs and > changing graphics. If screenreaders were able to recognize changing graphics, I think things would be a lot more accessible. > No one saw this Netflix change coming; I mean, the site is definitely > changed completely to the point where I cannot find my DVD queue; if > they were phasing out the DVD queue, news of this should have been > announced to subscribers long ago, but if this is merely a > configuration issue where more is made of graphics, well, then I guess > that, right now, they'll lose a lot of subscribers who can't figure > out the situation, but my hope is that screenreading software is > keeping up with the times, because they're certainly *NOT* slowing > down for us. > > > > Kevin > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was > scrubbed... > URL: > <http://lists.the-jdh.com/pipermail/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com/attachme nts/ > 20150622/f12f1ed9/attachment.html> > _______________________________________________ > Jfw mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com > -- Brad Martin [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> My Facebook page where I post online shopping coupons and deals: facebook.com/ucoupons <http://www.facebook.com/ucoupons> My SmarterBucks signup link <http://bit.ly/1w5FCPu> -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... 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