Goodness, I doubt I could have ever said it as short and plain as that.
Devin Prater
d.pra...@me.com



On Jul 5, 2014, at 11:47 AM, Christopher Hallsworth <christopher...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

> 1. QuickNav is used for general VoiceOver navigation with the benefit of 
> using it with one hand only. You can also access the virtual control 
> VoiceOver has called the rotor which allows you amongst other things to 
> navigate by characters words or lines.
> 2. You should use vo-arrow keys or arrow keys alone with QuickNav enabled for 
> a better experience navigating and using the mac. The ability to use the tab 
> key is for those new to the mac and are coming from Windows.
> 3. Interacting and uninteracting are primarily used in lists, tables and 
> toolbars. Any other controls can be activated the moment they're focused on 
> either via tab or vo-arrow keys or arrow keys alone when QuickNav is enabled.
> Hope any or all of these help.
> 
> Christopher Hallsworth
> Student at the Hadley School for the Blind
> www.hadley.edu
> 
> On 05/07/2014 16:22, Eleanor Martha Burke wrote:
>> Hi All, I have been coming to terms with a Mac for over 6 weeks now on a
>> daily basis and a little before that from time to time.  However there
>> are some concepts I really cannot come to work out which by now should
>> be fairly obvious to me.  Hope someone can clarify these for me.
>> 
>> At this point I would like to say I have good experience of Windows and
>> it is because of this I am finding some of these Mac concepts difficult
>> rather than them being intuitive.
>> 
>> Here goes then,
>> 
>> 1. I think as a rule of thumb quic nav is mainly used for navagating the
>> web but not otherwise.  Is this correct?
>> 2. While I know that single key navagation can be used with the tab key,
>> I cannot work out when I need to tab and when I need to vo right arrow.
>> 3. Interacting and uninteracting, I just don't know when and when not to
>> do this.  When someone has guided me they have said to interact and now
>> uninteract, left to my own devices I cannot make a decision as to when
>> to interact and when not to.
>> 
>> Sorry if these are silly questions but I think once I have clarification
>> on these I will have moved forward quite a pace with my Mac.
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> <--- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net --->
> 
> To reply to this post, please address your message to 
> mac-access@mac-access.net
> 
> You can find an archive of all messages posted    to the Mac-Access forum at 
> either the list's own dedicated web archive:
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> As the Mac Access Dot Net administrators, we do our very best to ensure that 
> the Mac-Access E-Mal list remains malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and 
> worm-free.  However, this should in no way replace your own security 
> strategy.  We assume neither liability nor responsibility should something 
> unpredictable happen.
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<--- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net --->

To reply to this post, please address your message to mac-access@mac-access.net

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As the Mac Access Dot Net administrators, we do our very best to ensure that 
the Mac-Access E-Mal list remains malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and 
worm-free.  However, this should in no way replace your own security strategy.  
We assume neither liability nor responsibility should something unpredictable 
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Please remember to update your membership preferences periodically by visiting 
the list website at:
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