holy cow dean you did it. that was the problem. it works. thats great! i
don't know how you found this but i'm happy now.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Dean Martineau" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "PC audio discussion list. " <pc-audio@pc-audio.org>
Sent: Tuesday, April 03, 2007 1:26 PM
Subject: Re: a couple questins regarding gameday audio and choosing a
player?


> I will try here to provide a summary of all that is known about
> accessing GameDay Audio.  I'm answering a couple private queries and
> a list all at once.  Remember as I go through this that there are
> several ways of accomplishing something in Windows.
>
> First, it is my experience so far that the system works.  When I
> don't get audio, it has been because I wasn't signed in, even though
> sometimes I thought I was.  Beyond that, I can't help with the no
> audio problem.
>
> Here's what I know.
>
> the link to get you straight to the Multimedia Center, where audio
> links are found, is this:
>
> http://mlb.mlb.com/NASApp/mlb/mediacenter/index.jsp
>
> I tend to do this backwards.  I go to the game, knowingly get no
> sound, sign in, then refresh the media player page.  So to get to the
> game, the easiest way is to search for the radio station that carries
> the game.  You can also use table navigation to peruse the available
> games.  the station will be a link, activating it will bring up the
> media player, but you won't hear anything yet.
>
> At this point, alt-tab back to the media center and use the links
> list to pull up Register - Login.  When you reach this page, find the
> fields for email address and password.  the system seems to retain
> nothing between sessions, so enter those.  You'll then get to the
> member info page.  Now alt-tab back to the media player and hit F5 to
> refresh it.  Shortly, you'll hear sound, unless you're in a
> commercial break for one of the networks that silences them.
>
> thanks to Kelly Ford, we now know that if you're using windows Media
> Player 11, and perhaps earlier editions, you can control the volume
> of the stream independent of the synthesizer using windows Media
> Player keystrokes.  to do this,  turn off your screen reader's
> special web navigation mode, whatever it is called.  For JAWS users,
> hit insert-z, window-Eyes users, shift-Ctrl-a.  Now shift-tab until
> you hear something like "unnamed-20."  Now, experiment.  with WMP 11,
> F8 lowers the volume and F9 raises it.  In WmP10, F9 and F10 are the
> lower and raise keystrokes.  You may or may not need to use your
> screen readers pass through or bypass key; I didn't have to do so
> with JAWS 8.
>
> I'm sure many will correct this post, and as I say, one can do things
> in a different order than I do them, but I'm trying to answer several
> questions in one post.
>
> Dean
>
>
>
> Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more...
> http://www.pc-audio.org
>
> To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Audio List Help, Guidelines, Archives and more... 
http://www.pc-audio.org

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to