What do you mean by saying you can’t move to the beginning of a line in 
terminal?
On the command line or in a text editor such as emacs , do the following:
control-a moves the insertion to the beginning of a line and Voiceover tracks.
control-e moves to the end of a line.
option-f move forward a word.
option-b moves backwards a word.
Note that you need to go into terminal options/profiles/keyboard and make sure 
the use option as meta key is checked to some of those commands to work.

As far as reviewing output written to the console, you can move vo to the line 
above the one you want to review than vo-right will put you at the begining of 
the line in question.  You can then review it with vo-right/left or 
vo-shift-right/left.

On Feb 15, 2015, at 12:21 AM, Sean Murphy <mhysnm1...@gmail.com> wrote:

David and all,

I agree with your approach. As a user of technology for over 30 years now. 
There is no one solution. If you lock yourself into one solution, then you will 
find down the track at some time your lack of knowledge and expertise has left 
you behind requiring a major re-learning.

Is the Mac platform without problems? No. Is it apples fault or the vendors 
fault. Both. If the product has lack of accessibility and comes from the Vendor 
like Microsoft. Then the issue lies in their court. But if there is features 
that could make your life easier on the Mac platform then that lies in apples 
court. Some areas of improvement I would like to see and have send to 
accessi...@apple.com <mailto:accessi...@apple.com> are:

Improved access to terminal. As yet, you cannot move to the beginning of a line 
in Terminal. You can go to the top of the window, to the first line of the 
visible text, but not to the beginning of the line you are reviewing with VO. 
This feature would be very useful when reviewing information in any program.

The challenge with bugs that are reported is how Apple rank them to be fixed. I 
do not know how much weighting they give to Voice-Over style bugs. The other 
challenge is the period between fixes. If a bug is reported and verified on the 
Mac Platform. It could take years before it is fixed. While bugs on Windows 
screen readers do take a lot shorter period of time to get fix. some bugs on 
both platforms never get fixed because they might not be able to validate the 
bug, to complex, breaks to many other features,  Product management slates more 
important features to be address and the poor old developer hasn’t got time to 
address the bug, etc. this is the nature of the beast when using a major main 
stream vendor  vs small vendors. Normally small vendors are faster to respond 
to issues then larger because of their internal processes and competing other 
priorities in the organisation.

On the iPhone I will admit 8.xx version of iOS is the worst release I have seen 
from Apple. crashes of Voice-Over, Voice-over being stuck on elements within 
Audible and other programs, Voice-over not responding to taps, When swiping 
through a app VO jus to different areas of the app, not the next item and so 
on.  Everything I have outlined here has not been seen in 7.xx and it is just 
to much hassle to role back. I have reported some of the issues I have found 
and the response from apple was not very encouraging.  EG: We have forwarded 
your issue on to the product owner. That means nothing and far as I am concern 
they have passed on the buck to someone else and the issue has gone into a 
black hole. Their customer management could improve greatly. Then I am a 
customer of them and a small one at that. Thus if I walk, it doesn’t hurt them. 
this is the problem when a company is the favour of the year and is growing 
like apple.  Microsoft and other large companies when they were on the up swing 
of market growth went through the same problems. So it isn’t anything new what 
I have outlined.

Sean 





> On 13 Feb 2015, at 11:31 am, David Griffith <daj.griff...@gmail.com 
> <mailto:daj.griff...@gmail.com>> wrote:
> 
> I too must confess that I am not a braille user on the Mac so cannot comment 
> on how frustrating this is. however there do seem to be  a lot of people 
> using Braille happily on the MacVisionaries list so perhaps there is some 
> expertise you can tap into there to get support. Apart from that I agree with 
> all 
> Barry has said. I also agree that there are areas that the experience on the 
> Mac can improve but equally I could compile a much longer list of complaints 
> / disappointments with Windows and the various Screenreaders and Windows OS 
> problems. . . Only today I was experiencing the frustration of Jaw’s 
> inability to accurately copy and paste text to and from   ,html content. This 
> is a long standing annoyance at what should be a basic function which has 
> existed for me since Jaws 14 and shows no sign of being resolved in 16.
> I can work around it by using NVDA but this and other deficiencies definitely 
> exist on Windows. I still prefer the Mac overwhelmingly for many functions, 
> including web browsing.
> The Mac also provides for free a voice dictation and command interface which 
> for    me personally outperforms anything I have bought on the Windows 
> platform, including Dragon Naturally   Speaking.
> 
> I agree that there is a problem with the implementation of advance Office 
> support on the Mac. However this is to a large extent about the lack of depth 
> in the compilation of strategies compared to the information, tutorials and 
> guides available on the Windows side. Apple has relatively little interest in 
> promoting Microsoft Office and will pay lip service only to supporting this 
> format in many cases. This is understandable given the competing nature of 
> their suites.
> Hopefully there is a lot to look forward to when the allegedly fully 
> Voiceover accessible version of Microsoft Office is released later this year.
> 
> I am in the fortunate position of having access to Mac and Windows. For some 
> things only Windows will do. For example Safari seems to fall over with my 
> bank web site. Equally there are things I will always if given a preference 
> will do on the Mac side. In general for me as long as it works, I prefer 
> doing things on the Mac now. 
> 
> However I want to advance my capability  on all platforms. I try to learn as 
> much as I can about not just Windows and Mac OS, but also iOS and Android. 
> Unfortunately I have never been able to get a Linux/vinux environment working 
> properly otherwise I would be delving into that as well.  Some might see this 
> as a geeky approach but my view in the struggle to overcome visual impairment 
> we should, if we can afford it, utilise every useful option open to us.
> 
> In the spectrum of options available I think both MacOs and iOS have 
> defensible and honourable records.
> 
> David Griffith
> 
> 
>> On 12 Feb 2015, at 23:29, Barry Hadder <bhad...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:bhad...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> Well, as I don’t use braille, I will not comment to much on  that except 
>> just to say that I think it’s a little odd to seemingly not egknolege the 
>> significance of an off the shelf system with braille support out of the box 
>> and not find away to make good use of it.  
>> With that said, there are some problems with some of your assertions that I 
>> feel need to be addrest since nobody else has done so yet.  I Also should 
>> point out that it is unclear to me at times whether or not your points are 
>> in reference to braille or speech.  So, there may be some occasional 
>> misunderstanding on my part.
>> 
>> 1.  Third party icons on the status bar are accessible with Voiceover.  
>> Specifically the Dropbox app.  Any problems that may occur will be more to 
>> due with the third party developer rather than Apple.  I don’t understand 
>> why you said they can’t be accessed with Voiceover.
>> 2.  The idea that there should be some kind of constant indicator that 
>> quicknav is turned on is your opinion.  It is not an accessibility issue.  
>> This could be classified as a feature request however.
>> 3.  What do you mean by network stations?  I have no idea what button in 
>> finder that you are referring to that connects to all available network 
>> shares at once.  I know of no such button nor have I found any reference to 
>> this function in the help documentation.  Finding and connecting to network 
>> shares in finder is quite easy to do with voiceover and if you want OS X to 
>> automatically connect to shares on your network, you can easily set this up 
>> in user preferences.  So, I see no accessibility issue here.  It’s possible 
>> however that I’m not understanding what you are referring to, but in any 
>> event I fail to see how this one thing could impact the usability of OS X 
>> for blind people to the extent that one would email Tim Cook.
>> 4.  Your subject is quality of osx with voiceover for people with 
>> dissablities.  However, I don’t see how iWork compatibility with MS office 
>> has anything to do spasifically with blind people being able to use OS X.
>> 5.  With regard to manipulating the mouse with vo, there are some valid 
>> concerns that need to be addressed, but emailing Tim Cook is not the correct 
>> way to do that.  I think it should also be said that flooding Apple with 
>> invalid complaints will increase the risk that the valid ones will go 
>> unnoticed or be ignored.
>> 
>> Finally, it’s good to hope for and expect new innovations including ones for 
>> disabilities, but it is also necessary to egknolege what has been done which 
>> I think is considerable and to be willing to make good use of what we have.
>> 
>> 
>> On Feb 11, 2015, at 4:38 PM, William Windels <william.wind...@gmail.com 
>> <mailto:william.wind...@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> 
>> Hello,
>> 
>> I am writing to you since the progress of the accessibility features are 
>> really pour in the last releases of osx 10.10.2.
>> The mac is still missing some important features against windows with a 
>> commercial screenreader, and this after more 6 years of  voiceover as 
>> built-in screenreader.
>> Ok, voiceover is still a free, built-in screenreader but on windows , there 
>> are 2 free screenreader for the windows platform that are better in some 
>> cases than voiceover.
>> 
>> Braille is still very basicnin osx:
>> Some daily problems I discover with voiceover:
>> I can’t follow courses with only braille output (without speech) during 
>> colleges.
>> I mean: there is some important information missing on the braille display 
>> that’s only available with speech.
>> 
>> What is missing:
>>>> 1- no option for word wrapping: this can be useful for fast reading 
>>>> (loudly);
>>>> 2- no different modes line, structured, speech (like in jaws): specialy 
>>>> structured mode in jaws is configurable, type of controls is shown, 
>>>> interaction-levels could be shown on this way. 
>>>> It’s e.g. very frustrating if you are in a text area and you can read all 
>>>> with the braille-line but you can’t edit or simply move the cursor to any 
>>>> position that is visible on the braille display.
>>>> 
>>>> 3- to know if quicknav is on/off before moving isn’t possible also.
>>>> On this way , it’s very easy to lose your position in a text-area or a 
>>>> window.
>>>> The quick-nav option has also some bugs in general but is sometimes very 
>>>> useful for navigation (and specially on a macbook).
>> 
>>>> 4- In some cases, the text that’s in the voiceover cursor is (always) 
>>>> underlineed with dots 7-8. On this way , no other attributes are shown and 
>>>> the cursor isn’t shown. If dots 7,8 are turned off, the cursor isn’t 
>>>> visible at all and capitals aren’t shown also.
>>>> 
>>>> 5- When i put the cursor on a letter in a text I delete a .(dot) sign on 
>>>> the left sign of the cursor and voiceover says sometimes something else.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> further  braille bugs:
>> cursor routing on the first sign of the braille-display: the text on the 
>> display is gone;
>> when composing a message to multiple recipients , while the speech is saying 
>> correctly the contact that has the focus, the braille display isn’t 
>> following.
>> 
>>>> Further:
>> 
>> 
>> Some bugs since 10.9 aren’t fixed:
>> the icons in the statusbar like the third party app dropbox can’t be 
>> accessed with voiceover from there.
>> The drag and drop-function with voiceover is not improved since the 
>> introduction in osx 10.7 and  gives not the same possibilities for blind 
>> users as for sighted users.
>> The button to mount all external (network)-stations at once in finder is not 
>> accessible with voiceover;
>> 
>> And some different points:
>> Ibooks was basically accessible with voiceover after one update from osx 
>> 10.9 to osx 10.10.
>> 
>> iWork’s is mainly accessible but is still missing some important 
>> compatibility options to work together with ms office.
>> (most of the people that work in a administrative job, use windows with ms 
>> office).
>> 
>> I still love the mac because of some intuïtive features like the trackpad 
>> with voiceover, time-machine, the possibility to maintain the system as 
>> blind user on my own.
>> But , I don’t know if the newest features for blind users are good and 
>> innovative enough to spend that much money on.
>> 
>> With so great financial results the last weeks that where announced from 
>> Apple, I should hope that more innovation is coming for people with 
>> disabilities.
>> 
>> Keep on the work that  Steve Jobs has started.
>> 
>> Kind regards,
>> William Windels
>> 
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>> Barry Hadder
>> bhad...@gmail.com <mailto:bhad...@gmail.com>
>> 
>> 
>> 
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> 
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