Hi Karen!
Here is some instructions to get that part of the doc working for you!
this should apply to the apps  as well!
Colin


> Folders that are placed into the Dock by default are set up to work with 
> Stacks, I believe.  What you want to do is navigate to the folder in your 
> dock, and bring up the contextual menu with VO-Shift-M. If you use VO-Down 
> arrow to move through the options, you'll find categories for "Sort by", 
> "Display as", and "View content as".  These are headings for the categories, 
> and will be announced as "dimmed".  The arguments you can check under "Sort 
> by" are: "Name", "Date Added", "Date Modified", "Date Created", and "Kind", 
> with "Name" checked as the default.  It's the options in the "Display as" and 
> "View content as" categories that you'll want to change.  I set "Display as" 
> to "Folder" instead of "Stack", and I set  "View content as" to "List". I 
> don't remember what the default setting of "View content as" is -- it may be 
> "Automatic" or "Fan", but when the contents come up and are not in "List" 
> mode VoiceOver doesn't announce them.  
> 
> You need to bring the context menu up for each item you want to change.  So 
> if you want to view your contents as "List", navigate to the folder, use 
> VO-Shift-M, and VO-Down arrow to "List" then press return. Then if you want 
> to display as "Folder", use VO-Shift-M again, arrow down to "Folder" and 
> press return.   You can use either the up and down arrow keys alone, or in 
> combination with the VoiceOver Control and Option keys to navigate these 
> menus.  The difference is that you won't hear the category headings of "Sort 
> by", "Display as", or "View content as" announced if you use the arrow keys 
> alone without the VO keys.  For anything you do apart from this initial 
> setup, using just the arrow keys by themselves will give you all the 
> information.
> 
> Once you have set up the folder to be displayed as a folder and viewed as a 
> list, you can just navigate to the folder and either press space bar or 
> VO-Space to display the list of contents. VoiceOver will announce the entries 
> as you arrow up and down the list.  Access subfolders with your right arrow 
> key, then move through files in your subfolder with the up and down arrow 
> keys.  Return to the parent folder by using the left arrow key.  You can also 
> move to the bottom of the list with Command+Down arrow or to the top of the 
> list with Command+Up arrow. (This seems to move to the top or bottom of the 
> visible list, so if your list is really long, continue to arrow up or down 
> and then press Command+Up or Down arrow again.)  The very end of the menu 
> options will be an "Options" menu (where you can reset the view options we 
> described above) and an "Open in Finder" option.  This is handy if you want 
> to do an actual copy and paste, or a move of the file in Finder.
> 
> In addition, there's a rather neat trick if you want to move some of your 
> iTunes folders like for Podcasts to the dock, because you can quickly 
> navigate through the menus and start a podcast playing in iTunes from there!
> 
> Also, I've found that in the dock you can use Fn+Down Arrow to cycle between 
> the Applications section, the Folders section, and the Trash.  Fn+Up Arrow 
> also works in the reverse direction.  So this is a quick way to move to the 
> documents section of the dock after you issue your VO-D or Control-F3 command 
> to move to the dock.
> 
> HTH.  Cheers,
> 
> Esther


On 9 Nov 2011, at 17:08, 1smart...@cox.net wrote:

> Hello,
> If someone can tell me my error, I'd certainly appreciate it. When navigating 
> the dock items, there are items to the right of the separator (applications, 
> documents, downloads and trash). When I land on any of these items, 
> instructions say to press VO + space to open the item. When I do, nothing 
> happens...ever. All other apps open correctly from the dock. What am I 
> missing, please?
> 
> Thank you,
> Karen
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