Hi Chris,

I'm a little confused about what you are trying to do here.  I went to the 
Cylinder Preservation web site (found with Google), and browsed their web site. 
 They appear to have tracks stored as mp3 files.  Since there is no "right 
click" on the Mac, I assume you are trying to bring up a contextual menu 
(VO-Shift-M), or else you just want to directly download the files to your 
computer, instead of playing them in your browser.  If you want to download the 
linked file directly, you can press Option+Return when you are on the link you 
want, and you'll automatically force a download without having to find the 
option to "Save Linked File" in your context menu (or bring up the context menu 
at all).  In this case, it will go to your default location for Safari 
Downloads which, if you have not changed the location in your Safari 
Preferences, is a folder named "Downloads" under your home directory. Depending 
on how your Mac is set up, you might have a "Downloads" folder in your dock, or 
you can check your Safari Downloads window by pressing Command-Option-L. If you 
navigate to the bottom of the window (VO-Fn-Right Arrow on the laptop), and 
interact with the group (VO-Shift-Down Arrow), you can monitor the size and 
progress of the download, and also VO-Space on "Show in Finder" once the 
Download is complete to bring up a Finder window with your downloaded file 
selected.  If you want to play the file without necessarily adding it to your 
iTunes library, just press space bar to QuickLook the file, and be able to 
review the title information tags, etc.  If you just open the file, it will 
automatically be added to iTunes.  In case you are not sure where the file has 
been placed in your iTunes Music library, you can always navigate to the 
"Recently Added" smart playlist in your iTunes sources table, and be able to 
find all tracks that were added to iTunes in the last 2 weeks (that are not 
podcast subscriptions) in chronological order.

I don't understand the subject line of "Converting files to iTunes".  The mp3 
format is one of the standard file formats supported in iTunes, and you are not 
ripping the file from a CD or other format, nor are you trying to use a special 
version of mp3 encoding, such as the LAME encoder, to digitize your tracks. 
(Even that's possible in iTunes, incidentally).

Possible things to check: is your mouse cursor on the link you want to download 
or view the context menu for (i.e., perform your "right click" in your words)?  
You can do this with VO-F5.  I hear VoiceOver speak the number of the link (for 
the performer, title, issue source, and year listed), followed by the words 
"clickable".  Your results may depend on how your cursor tracking is set (e.g., 
you may have to route your mouse cursor to your VoiceOver cursor with 
VO-Command-F5), and whether you are navigating the web page in DOM mode or 
group mode.  For a very few web pages with idiosyncratic HTML encoding, the 
main Blind Cool Tech web page being the prime example, you may have to interact 
with the link before you view it in either the context menu or use 
Option+Return to download.  Note that you may have an easier time with some of 
these issues if you use a Magic TrackPad (or TrackPad Commander) to navigate.

If you want to set up your Downloads folder in the Dock (provided there is one 
in your setup) to be easily viewable in Finder, you can also do that, and 
navigate to that folder to check downloads instead.  You'd have to use the 
context menu (VO-Shift-M) and choose the menu options to display as a "Folder" 
instead of a "Stack", and view content as "List" instead of "Fan", "Automatic", 
or "Grid".  You could also choose to sort the displayed files by "Date Added" 
instead of "Name" if you wanted to easily find the latest download from the 
dock.  Each setting change would have to be applied one by one with a separate 
VO-Shift-M.

HTH.  Cheers,

Esther

On May 19, 2011, at 15:00, Christopher Peppel wrote:

> Hi Ricardo and everybody,
> 
> What I am trying to do is a right click with the keyboard.  It seemed to work 
> before, but now, nothing happens.  These are music files from the cylinder 
> preservation website.  I went to the genious bard today and I don't think 
> they understood what I was trying to do.
> 
> Thanks.
> 
> Chris
> On May 19, 2011, at 5:52 PM, Ricardo Walker wrote:
> 
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I'm a little unclear on what you want to do.  What are you converting, and 
>> what do you wish to convert it to?
>> 
>> Thanks
>> 
>> Ricardo Walker
>> rwalker...@gmail.com
>> Twitter, Skype, and AIM: rwalker296
>> www.mobileaccess.org
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> On May 17, 2011, at 1:06 PM, Christopher Peppel wrote:
>> 
>>> Hi there,
>>> 
>>> I was trying to do a right-click to bring up the menu to convert music 
>>> files to play in Itunes.  It was working, but when I tried to do it the 
>>> other day, nothing would happen.  If I do Command I, I'm asked if I want to 
>>> E-Mail the page which is one of the choices.  If there are some files 
>>> missing for some reason, and if I run the CD installer, will it replace my 
>>> whole system or just add back any possible missing files?
>>> 
>>> Thanks for any ideas in advance.
>>> 
>>> Chris
>>> 

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