Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-08 Thread Vikas Kapoor
Why don't you turn your punctuation mode off for sometime?
For those who are using outlook express or similar programme, there is a 
solution rather than taking a long step of sending the mail from the 
beginning.
Vikas Kapoor,
MSN Id:[EMAIL PROTECTED], YahooSkype Id: dl_vikas,
Mobile: (+91) 9891098137.
- Original Message - 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:08 PM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


hello geeta mam, very good information, but this is the problem with
fwd mails  there are and , and its very distracting and
annoying. it's  good for those who are using outlook  and other tools,
but when its come to people like me those are using mails directly.
there is no solution at all.
I'd like mention the problem  again, that there is plenty of .
This problem can be resolve by clicking on reply, instead of forward.
We have to type email ID in both the cases.

It would be very helpful.

thanks and regards, Akhilesh.



On 10/7/07, Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
 Tuesday, October 02, 2007
 
 GPS joins the guide dogs
 
 By Adam Turner
 
 WHILE a guide dog can warn you as you approach a kerb, you can't ask even
 the brightest canine to take you to the nearest ATM.
 
 Trekker is a GPS satellite navigation system for the vision-impaired,
 designed to complement a guide dog or cane in helping people find their 
 way
 around town. Like in-car systems, Trekker providers users with 
 turn-by-turn
 navigation - reading aloud the names of the streets rather than just 
 saying
 next left.
 
 Produced by Australian assistive technology developer HumanWare, the
 Trekker
 system consists of off-the-shelf components: a HP 2490B hand-held PC, a
 Bluetooth-enabled GPS receiver and a shoulder speaker. The system can be
 worn around the neck under a jacket or on a shoulder strap. A sleeve 
 slides
 over the hand-held PC, which is fitted with buttons that in turn press 
 the
 touchscreen, allowing users to enter commands such as their destination.
 They can also search for local points of interest such as hotels, cafes 
 and
 ATMs, as well as have these pointed out during a journey.
 
 One of Trekker's strengths is the ability for users to study maps and
 rehearse routes before they set off, making it easier for them to find
 their
 way around unfamiliar places. They can also create their own points of
 interest using voice notes that allow them to record extra information,
 such
 as the location of steps or other obstacles.
 
 Trekker relies on data supplied to HumanWare by global mapping specialist
 NAVTEQ. After several years on the market in North America and Europe,
 Trekker was launched in Australia late last year to coincide with 
 NAVTEQ's
 move into the Australian market.
 
 While Trekker gives vision-impaired people greater freedom to travel,
 HumanWare Australia's national blindness products consultant, Ramona 
 Mandy,
 says it's no replacement for her guide dog, Paisley.
 
 The Trekker doesn't just give vision-impaired people information, it 
 gives
 them independence. That independence makes you more confident and more
 employable. Some of my customers have said it's useful to be able to 
 review
 a route first from the comfort and safety of home by using the offline
 browse, Ms Mandy says.
 
 We call it a secondary orientation device, because it never will replace 
 a
 guide dog or a cane. You have to have good orientation and mobility 
 skills.
 Orientation is all about travelling safely and independently, so whether
 you're a cane user or a dog user, you have to have good orientation 
 skills
 first.
 
 An hereditary eye condition saw Ms Mandy's vision fade during childhood.
 
 She learnt braille at seven, starting using a cane at 15 and was 
 completely
 blind by 25. Today she relies on Trekker, Paisley and a BrailleNote, a
 Personal Digital Assistant with a braille keyboard and display as well as
 text-to-speech functionality.
 
 Vision-impaired people have access to about 5 per cent of information 
 that
 sighted people access through print. Having Trekker helps improve that
 imbalance, Ms Mandy says.
 
 Obviously all blind people don't live together in Blindville, so with
 these
 NAVTEQ maps we can go wherever we need to. It means I don't need someone 
 to
 take me new places for the first time. For example, I'm going to Perth 
 for
 a
 conference later this year and I'll be able to find on my own where the
 nearest ATM or pharmacy is.
 
 NAVTEQ's global coverage also makes it easy for Trekker users to travel
 overseas, says NAVTEQ's Australian business development director, Kirk
 Mitchell.
 
 We've been working with HumanWare overseas for several years now and 
 when
 we moved to Australia we had teams of mappers scouring the country,
 recording information above and beyond that required by motorists so we 
 can
 meet the needs

[AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Geetha Shamanna
Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
Tuesday, October 02, 2007

GPS joins the guide dogs

By Adam Turner

WHILE a guide dog can warn you as you approach a kerb, you can't ask even
the brightest canine to take you to the nearest ATM.

Trekker is a GPS satellite navigation system for the vision-impaired,
designed to complement a guide dog or cane in helping people find their way
around town. Like in-car systems, Trekker providers users with turn-by-turn
navigation - reading aloud the names of the streets rather than just saying
next left.

Produced by Australian assistive technology developer HumanWare, the 
Trekker
system consists of off-the-shelf components: a HP 2490B hand-held PC, a
Bluetooth-enabled GPS receiver and a shoulder speaker. The system can be
worn around the neck under a jacket or on a shoulder strap. A sleeve slides
over the hand-held PC, which is fitted with buttons that in turn press the
touchscreen, allowing users to enter commands such as their destination.
They can also search for local points of interest such as hotels, cafes and
ATMs, as well as have these pointed out during a journey.

One of Trekker's strengths is the ability for users to study maps and
rehearse routes before they set off, making it easier for them to find 
their
way around unfamiliar places. They can also create their own points of
interest using voice notes that allow them to record extra information, 
such
as the location of steps or other obstacles.

Trekker relies on data supplied to HumanWare by global mapping specialist
NAVTEQ. After several years on the market in North America and Europe,
Trekker was launched in Australia late last year to coincide with NAVTEQ's
move into the Australian market.

While Trekker gives vision-impaired people greater freedom to travel,
HumanWare Australia's national blindness products consultant, Ramona Mandy,
says it's no replacement for her guide dog, Paisley.

The Trekker doesn't just give vision-impaired people information, it gives
them independence. That independence makes you more confident and more
employable. Some of my customers have said it's useful to be able to review
a route first from the comfort and safety of home by using the offline
browse, Ms Mandy says.

We call it a secondary orientation device, because it never will replace a
guide dog or a cane. You have to have good orientation and mobility skills.
Orientation is all about travelling safely and independently, so whether
you're a cane user or a dog user, you have to have good orientation skills
first.

An hereditary eye condition saw Ms Mandy's vision fade during childhood.

She learnt braille at seven, starting using a cane at 15 and was completely
blind by 25. Today she relies on Trekker, Paisley and a BrailleNote, a
Personal Digital Assistant with a braille keyboard and display as well as
text-to-speech functionality.

Vision-impaired people have access to about 5 per cent of information that
sighted people access through print. Having Trekker helps improve that
imbalance, Ms Mandy says.

Obviously all blind people don't live together in Blindville, so with 
these
NAVTEQ maps we can go wherever we need to. It means I don't need someone to
take me new places for the first time. For example, I'm going to Perth for 
a
conference later this year and I'll be able to find on my own where the
nearest ATM or pharmacy is.

NAVTEQ's global coverage also makes it easy for Trekker users to travel
overseas, says NAVTEQ's Australian business development director, Kirk
Mitchell.

We've been working with HumanWare overseas for several years now and when
we moved to Australia we had teams of mappers scouring the country,
recording information above and beyond that required by motorists so we can
meet the needs of customers like HumanWare, Mr Mitchell says.

Next year we're looking to bring out in Australia what we call Discover
Cities, which is a pedestrian-based product that will include points of
interest, such as all the exit points in railway stations. Directions for
walkways and paths in parks are to follow.

www.humanware.com

SOURCE

www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/02/1191091041855.html



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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread akhil . akhil29
hello geeta mam, very good information, but this is the problem with
fwd mails  there are and , and its very distracting and
annoying. it's  good for those who are using outlook  and other tools,
but when its come to people like me those are using mails directly.
there is no solution at all.
I'd like mention the problem  again, that there is plenty of .
This problem can be resolve by clicking on reply, instead of forward.
We have to type email ID in both the cases.

It would be very helpful.

thanks and regards, Akhilesh.



On 10/7/07, Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
 Tuesday, October 02, 2007
 
 GPS joins the guide dogs
 
 By Adam Turner
 
 WHILE a guide dog can warn you as you approach a kerb, you can't ask even
 the brightest canine to take you to the nearest ATM.
 
 Trekker is a GPS satellite navigation system for the vision-impaired,
 designed to complement a guide dog or cane in helping people find their way
 around town. Like in-car systems, Trekker providers users with turn-by-turn
 navigation - reading aloud the names of the streets rather than just saying
 next left.
 
 Produced by Australian assistive technology developer HumanWare, the
 Trekker
 system consists of off-the-shelf components: a HP 2490B hand-held PC, a
 Bluetooth-enabled GPS receiver and a shoulder speaker. The system can be
 worn around the neck under a jacket or on a shoulder strap. A sleeve slides
 over the hand-held PC, which is fitted with buttons that in turn press the
 touchscreen, allowing users to enter commands such as their destination.
 They can also search for local points of interest such as hotels, cafes and
 ATMs, as well as have these pointed out during a journey.
 
 One of Trekker's strengths is the ability for users to study maps and
 rehearse routes before they set off, making it easier for them to find
 their
 way around unfamiliar places. They can also create their own points of
 interest using voice notes that allow them to record extra information,
 such
 as the location of steps or other obstacles.
 
 Trekker relies on data supplied to HumanWare by global mapping specialist
 NAVTEQ. After several years on the market in North America and Europe,
 Trekker was launched in Australia late last year to coincide with NAVTEQ's
 move into the Australian market.
 
 While Trekker gives vision-impaired people greater freedom to travel,
 HumanWare Australia's national blindness products consultant, Ramona Mandy,
 says it's no replacement for her guide dog, Paisley.
 
 The Trekker doesn't just give vision-impaired people information, it gives
 them independence. That independence makes you more confident and more
 employable. Some of my customers have said it's useful to be able to review
 a route first from the comfort and safety of home by using the offline
 browse, Ms Mandy says.
 
 We call it a secondary orientation device, because it never will replace a
 guide dog or a cane. You have to have good orientation and mobility skills.
 Orientation is all about travelling safely and independently, so whether
 you're a cane user or a dog user, you have to have good orientation skills
 first.
 
 An hereditary eye condition saw Ms Mandy's vision fade during childhood.
 
 She learnt braille at seven, starting using a cane at 15 and was completely
 blind by 25. Today she relies on Trekker, Paisley and a BrailleNote, a
 Personal Digital Assistant with a braille keyboard and display as well as
 text-to-speech functionality.
 
 Vision-impaired people have access to about 5 per cent of information that
 sighted people access through print. Having Trekker helps improve that
 imbalance, Ms Mandy says.
 
 Obviously all blind people don't live together in Blindville, so with
 these
 NAVTEQ maps we can go wherever we need to. It means I don't need someone to
 take me new places for the first time. For example, I'm going to Perth for
 a
 conference later this year and I'll be able to find on my own where the
 nearest ATM or pharmacy is.
 
 NAVTEQ's global coverage also makes it easy for Trekker users to travel
 overseas, says NAVTEQ's Australian business development director, Kirk
 Mitchell.
 
 We've been working with HumanWare overseas for several years now and when
 we moved to Australia we had teams of mappers scouring the country,
 recording information above and beyond that required by motorists so we can
 meet the needs of customers like HumanWare, Mr Mitchell says.
 
 Next year we're looking to bring out in Australia what we call Discover
 Cities, which is a pedestrian-based product that will include points of
 interest, such as all the exit points in railway stations. Directions for
 walkways and paths in parks are to follow.
 
 www.humanware.com
 
 SOURCE
 
 www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/10/02/1191091041855.html



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 the subject unsubscribe.

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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Syed Imran
And in subject line, RE can also be replaced by, FWD. Very good 
information from both the ends.
- Original Message - 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 5:38 AM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 hello geeta mam, very good information, but this is the problem with
 fwd mails  there are and , and its very distracting and
 annoying. it's  good for those who are using outlook  and other tools,
 but when its come to people like me those are using mails directly.
 there is no solution at all.
 I'd like mention the problem  again, that there is plenty of .
 This problem can be resolve by clicking on reply, instead of forward.
 We have to type email ID in both the cases.

 It would be very helpful.

 thanks and regards, Akhilesh.



 On 10/7/07, Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Sydney Morning Herald, Australia
 Tuesday, October 02, 2007
 
 GPS joins the guide dogs
 
 By Adam Turner
 
 WHILE a guide dog can warn you as you approach a kerb, you can't ask 
 even
 the brightest canine to take you to the nearest ATM.
 
 Trekker is a GPS satellite navigation system for the vision-impaired,
 designed to complement a guide dog or cane in helping people find their 
 way
 around town. Like in-car systems, Trekker providers users with 
 turn-by-turn
 navigation - reading aloud the names of the streets rather than just 
 saying
 next left.
 
 Produced by Australian assistive technology developer HumanWare, the
 Trekker
 system consists of off-the-shelf components: a HP 2490B hand-held PC, a
 Bluetooth-enabled GPS receiver and a shoulder speaker. The system can be
 worn around the neck under a jacket or on a shoulder strap. A sleeve 
 slides
 over the hand-held PC, which is fitted with buttons that in turn press 
 the
 touchscreen, allowing users to enter commands such as their destination.
 They can also search for local points of interest such as hotels, cafes 
 and
 ATMs, as well as have these pointed out during a journey.
 
 One of Trekker's strengths is the ability for users to study maps and
 rehearse routes before they set off, making it easier for them to find
 their
 way around unfamiliar places. They can also create their own points of
 interest using voice notes that allow them to record extra information,
 such
 as the location of steps or other obstacles.
 
 Trekker relies on data supplied to HumanWare by global mapping 
 specialist
 NAVTEQ. After several years on the market in North America and Europe,
 Trekker was launched in Australia late last year to coincide with 
 NAVTEQ's
 move into the Australian market.
 
 While Trekker gives vision-impaired people greater freedom to travel,
 HumanWare Australia's national blindness products consultant, Ramona 
 Mandy,
 says it's no replacement for her guide dog, Paisley.
 
 The Trekker doesn't just give vision-impaired people information, it 
 gives
 them independence. That independence makes you more confident and more
 employable. Some of my customers have said it's useful to be able to 
 review
 a route first from the comfort and safety of home by using the offline
 browse, Ms Mandy says.
 
 We call it a secondary orientation device, because it never will 
 replace a
 guide dog or a cane. You have to have good orientation and mobility 
 skills.
 Orientation is all about travelling safely and independently, so whether
 you're a cane user or a dog user, you have to have good orientation 
 skills
 first.
 
 An hereditary eye condition saw Ms Mandy's vision fade during childhood.
 
 She learnt braille at seven, starting using a cane at 15 and was 
 completely
 blind by 25. Today she relies on Trekker, Paisley and a BrailleNote, a
 Personal Digital Assistant with a braille keyboard and display as well 
 as
 text-to-speech functionality.
 
 Vision-impaired people have access to about 5 per cent of information 
 that
 sighted people access through print. Having Trekker helps improve that
 imbalance, Ms Mandy says.
 
 Obviously all blind people don't live together in Blindville, so with
 these
 NAVTEQ maps we can go wherever we need to. It means I don't need someone 
 to
 take me new places for the first time. For example, I'm going to Perth 
 for
 a
 conference later this year and I'll be able to find on my own where the
 nearest ATM or pharmacy is.
 
 NAVTEQ's global coverage also makes it easy for Trekker users to travel
 overseas, says NAVTEQ's Australian business development director, Kirk
 Mitchell.
 
 We've been working with HumanWare overseas for several years now and 
 when
 we moved to Australia we had teams of mappers scouring the country,
 recording information above and beyond that required by motorists so we 
 can
 meet the needs of customers like HumanWare, Mr Mitchell says.
 
 Next year we're looking to bring out in Australia what we call Discover
 Cities, which is a pedestrian-based product that will include points

Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Abdul Razique Khan
Hello Akhilesh,
In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on 
removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it would 
help you.
Abdul 


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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread akhil . akhil29
Dear, I've read it, but its only  for outlook users
Take care, akhilesh.


On 10/7/07, Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hello Akhilesh,
 In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
 removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it would
 help you.
 Abdul


 To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
 the subject unsubscribe.

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 visit the list home page at
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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Syed Imran
Perfectly right, but this tip only works in outlook express. So the earlier 
solution is much better I feel
- Original Message - 
From: Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:11 AM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Hello Akhilesh,
 In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
 removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it would
 help you.
 Abdul


 To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 with the subject unsubscribe.

 To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes, 
 please visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in 


To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the subject unsubscribe.

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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Geetha Shamanna
I would like to clarify here that the greater than signs were part of the 
original message, and were not inserted when I forwarded the message to the 
list.

In situations where the original message is itself a forwarded one and 
therefore already contains the  signs, is it possible to remove the  
signs? Using the Reply option instead of the Forward option does not work in 
this case. - Original Message - 

Geetha
From: Syed Imran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 7:24 AM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


Perfectly right, but this tip only works in outlook express. So the earlier
solution is much better I feel
- Original Message - 
From: Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:11 AM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Hello Akhilesh,
 In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
 removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it would
 help you.
 Abdul


 To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with the subject unsubscribe.

 To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
 please visit the list home page at
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Syed Imran
Hi ma'm
Oh I see. Was the greater than sign already there in the message? OK.
The easiest method of removing  sign I know is
1. After pressing ctrl+F or ctrl+R, copy the whole message to notepad
2. Press ctrl +H to open Find and replace diolog box.
3. In find edit box,
a) enter , without the quotations of course.
B) In replace edit box, don't type anything, just live it blank.
4. Press alt +A to replace all.
5. cut or copy back to outlook express and send it.
With best regards
Syed Imran
- Original Message - 
From: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 9:00 AM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


I would like to clarify here that the greater than signs were part of the
 original message, and were not inserted when I forwarded the message to 
 the
 list.

 In situations where the original message is itself a forwarded one and
 therefore already contains the  signs, is it possible to remove the 
 signs? Using the Reply option instead of the Forward option does not work 
 in
 this case. - Original Message - 

 Geetha
 From: Syed Imran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 7:24 AM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Perfectly right, but this tip only works in outlook express. So the 
 earlier
 solution is much better I feel
 - Original Message - 
 From: Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:11 AM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Hello Akhilesh,
 In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
 removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it 
 would
 help you.
 Abdul


 To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with the subject unsubscribe.

 To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
 please visit the list home page at
 
 http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


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 please
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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Harish Kotian
Hello all
I do appreciate the point of avoiding forward message and instead copy the 
text and paste to a new mail.
However, in this instance, where much cannot be done, then, 1 trick which 
will work irrespective using in email client or web is to turn the 
punctuation to none.

Harish
- Original Message - 
From: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 9:30 PM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


I would like to clarify here that the greater than signs were part of the
 original message, and were not inserted when I forwarded the message to 
 the
 list.

 In situations where the original message is itself a forwarded one and
 therefore already contains the  signs, is it possible to remove the 
 signs? Using the Reply option instead of the Forward option does not work 
 in
 this case. - Original Message - 

 Geetha
 From: Syed Imran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 7:24 AM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Perfectly right, but this tip only works in outlook express. So the 
 earlier
 solution is much better I feel
 - Original Message - 
 From: Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:11 AM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Hello Akhilesh,
 In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
 removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it 
 would
 help you.
 Abdul


 To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 with the subject unsubscribe.

 To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
 please visit the list home page at
 
 http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in


 To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 with
 the subject unsubscribe.

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 please
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 please visit the list home page at
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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread Syed Imran
Asking casually, is there a Jaws shortcut key to toggle the punctuation? 
Even if not, Harish's idea is definitely worth examining. But one thing is 
for sure though, just now when I did this experiment before typing the last 
sentence, I could actually hear  greater than sign on the blank lines. So 
Jaws cannot avoid saying greater  when there is a blank line without 
saying blank, even if the punctuation mode is off. However, this should 
anoy or irritate as less as the message contains the blank lines.





Like this, more or less
With best regards
Syed Imran
- Original Message - 
From: Harish Kotian [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 
accessindia@accessindia.org.in
Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:03 PM
Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Hello all
 I do appreciate the point of avoiding forward message and instead copy the
 text and paste to a new mail.
 However, in this instance, where much cannot be done, then, 1 trick which
 will work irrespective using in email client or web is to turn the
 punctuation to none.

 Harish
 - Original Message - 
 From: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 9:30 PM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


I would like to clarify here that the greater than signs were part of the
 original message, and were not inserted when I forwarded the message to
 the
 list.

 In situations where the original message is itself a forwarded one and
 therefore already contains the  signs, is it possible to remove the 
 signs? Using the Reply option instead of the Forward option does not work
 in
 this case. - Original Message - 

 Geetha
 From: Syed Imran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 7:24 AM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Perfectly right, but this tip only works in outlook express. So the
 earlier
 solution is much better I feel
 - Original Message - 
 From: Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:11 AM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


 Hello Akhilesh,
 In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
 removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it
 would
 help you.
 Abdul


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Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs

2007-10-07 Thread akhil . akhil29
yeah,  syed there is shortcut  available for this. press insert + V to
open the jaws  verbosity option then hunt for the option.
as for as harish sir's idea is concern, its working very well, as far
as  are not coming in a blank line.


On 10/8/07, Syed Imran [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Asking casually, is there a Jaws shortcut key to toggle the punctuation?
 Even if not, Harish's idea is definitely worth examining. But one thing is
 for sure though, just now when I did this experiment before typing the last
 sentence, I could actually hear  greater than sign on the blank lines. So
 Jaws cannot avoid saying greater  when there is a blank line without
 saying blank, even if the punctuation mode is off. However, this should
 anoy or irritate as less as the message contains the blank lines.
 
 
 
 
 
 Like this, more or less
 With best regards
 Syed Imran
 - Original Message -
 From: Harish Kotian [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED];
 accessindia@accessindia.org.in
 Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:03 PM
 Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs


  Hello all
  I do appreciate the point of avoiding forward message and instead copy the
  text and paste to a new mail.
  However, in this instance, where much cannot be done, then, 1 trick which
  will work irrespective using in email client or web is to turn the
  punctuation to none.
 
  Harish
  - Original Message -
  From: Geetha Shamanna [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
  Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 9:30 PM
  Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs
 
 
 I would like to clarify here that the greater than signs were part of the
  original message, and were not inserted when I forwarded the message to
  the
  list.
 
  In situations where the original message is itself a forwarded one and
  therefore already contains the  signs, is it possible to remove the 
  signs? Using the Reply option instead of the Forward option does not work
  in
  this case. - Original Message -
 
  Geetha
  From: Syed Imran [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
  Sent: Monday, October 08, 2007 7:24 AM
  Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs
 
 
  Perfectly right, but this tip only works in outlook express. So the
  earlier
  solution is much better I feel
  - Original Message -
  From: Abdul Razique Khan [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  To: accessindia@accessindia.org.in
  Sent: Sunday, October 07, 2007 6:11 AM
  Subject: Re: [AI] Fwd: Article: GPS joins the guide dogs
 
 
  Hello Akhilesh,
  In the tips and tricks section of Ashish Sir's website there is a tip on
  removing the  signs from the mails. I havint used it but hope it it
  would
  help you.
  Abdul
 
 
  To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  with the subject unsubscribe.
 
  To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
  please visit the list home page at
 
 
 http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in
 
 
  To unsubscribe send a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  with
  the subject unsubscribe.
 
  To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
  please
  visit the list home page at
 
  http://accessindia.org.in/mailman/listinfo/accessindia_accessindia.org.in
 
 
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  with the subject unsubscribe.
 
  To change your subscription to digest mode or make any other changes,
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