Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-03 Thread Chris Hofstader
My thoughts exactly.  I think the people who read AT reviews fall into  
two categories: people who work for AT companies/departments and  
people already using AT who are not likely to switch but enjoy keeping  
up with the technology conversations.

Most purchasing decisions happen almost entirely apart from the users  
of AT who rarely are even asked for input.

An odd phenomena though, is the growth of VO and people who seem new  
to computing or new to participating in discussions about such.   
Whenever a new person joins any of the three Apple related lists to  
which I subscribe, I make certain of taking notice of their name.   
Some are people I've known for years from lots of different lists.  A  
whole lot, maybe even most, seem new to technology lists (I doubt too  
many are entirely new to computing as finding a list, getting signed  
up, etc. isn't obvious to the novice).

I know that Apple stores are offering VO training because (I'm  
guessing) the local Lighthouse or other agencies aren't serving the  
Mac market.

I'm working on a very large proposal for a really huge project that  
includes a lot of questions about populations and numbers of users on  
different AT with a variety of different disabilities.  The only  
information I can get about Mac users with vision impairment comes  
from surveys which have the self selection problem (a lot of people do  
not fill out surveys) which may over or under-estimate MacinBlinks as  
we've no scientificly gathered data.  Lighthouse and other training  
centers don't count Macintosh users as they do not train them so, as  
far as that class of NGO goes, we do not really exist.

As millions of Macs have shipped since the first VO, we've no clue how  
many blinks are using them, how they are being used, etc.

I would estimate, though, from my entirely unscientific survey of  
names on mailing lists that Mac is hitting a previously unserved  
population and doing so well enough for the users to spend time on  
lists helping each other out.

I do not, however, know how many people are on these lists - the JAWS  
list has over 900 users last I looked and the Apple oriented seem to  
have a lot fewer.  Of course, pointing back to the top of the message,  
if Mac is being used by tons of real novices, then we have no way to  
get a census of VO use.

Ah... tangled webs and the like...

cdh

To wit:

cdh
On Oct 2, 2009, at 5:56 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:

 Apple has played the 'let the best technology win in the long run'  
 game for a while. Maybe that's why they have about 5% market share.  
 Most people don't care and just get what their network recommend. So  
 those already leaning towards Apple will cite antagonism and those  
 leaning away will consider it affirmation. Neither will move much  
 based on one review.

 CB

 Cameron wrote:

 Hi.  It's depressing to think about the potential number of people  
 who after
 reading that awful so called review, will not end up giving the mac  
 platform
 a shot.  With all the work apple has done, and continues to do in  
 terms of
 out of the box accessibility, this is quite unfair.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 7:06 AM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I agree, but political entities, whether they are governments,  
 political
 parties, or the NFB don't tend to admit to their mistakes.  
 Unfortunate, but
 true.
 - Original Message -
 From: kaare dehard kaare.deh...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:54 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I think your right rich, however, their attempt to do this is rather
 sad since it would be easier to just admit that they are human like
 the rest of us, that an error was made, and then not repeat this.  
 That
 certainly would have gone some ways to repairing damaged credibility.
 On 2009-09-30, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to
 make up for
 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite
 admitting they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is
 what I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the  
 iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:

 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com

Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-03 Thread Nicolai Svendsen
 of the three Apple related lists to  
 which I subscribe, I make certain of taking notice of their name.   
 Some are people I've known for years from lots of different lists.   
 A whole lot, maybe even most, seem new to technology lists (I doubt  
 too many are entirely new to computing as finding a list, getting  
 signed up, etc. isn't obvious to the novice).

 I know that Apple stores are offering VO training because (I'm  
 guessing) the local Lighthouse or other agencies aren't serving the  
 Mac market.

 I'm working on a very large proposal for a really huge project that  
 includes a lot of questions about populations and numbers of users  
 on different AT with a variety of different disabilities.  The only  
 information I can get about Mac users with vision impairment comes  
 from surveys which have the self selection problem (a lot of people  
 do not fill out surveys) which may over or under-estimate  
 MacinBlinks as we've no scientificly gathered data.  Lighthouse and  
 other training centers don't count Macintosh users as they do not  
 train them so, as far as that class of NGO goes, we do not really  
 exist.

 As millions of Macs have shipped since the first VO, we've no clue  
 how many blinks are using them, how they are being used, etc.

 I would estimate, though, from my entirely unscientific survey of  
 names on mailing lists that Mac is hitting a previously unserved  
 population and doing so well enough for the users to spend time on  
 lists helping each other out.

 I do not, however, know how many people are on these lists - the  
 JAWS list has over 900 users last I looked and the Apple oriented  
 seem to have a lot fewer.  Of course, pointing back to the top of  
 the message, if Mac is being used by tons of real novices, then we  
 have no way to get a census of VO use.

 Ah... tangled webs and the like...

 cdh

 To wit:

 cdh
 On Oct 2, 2009, at 5:56 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:

 Apple has played the 'let the best technology win in the long run'  
 game for a while. Maybe that's why they have about 5% market share.  
 Most people don't care and just get what their network recommend.  
 So those already leaning towards Apple will cite antagonism and  
 those leaning away will consider it affirmation. Neither will move  
 much based on one review.

 CB

 Cameron wrote:

 Hi.  It's depressing to think about the potential number of people  
 who after
 reading that awful so called review, will not end up giving the  
 mac platform
 a shot.  With all the work apple has done, and continues to do in  
 terms of
 out of the box accessibility, this is quite unfair.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 7:06 AM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I agree, but political entities, whether they are governments,  
 political
 parties, or the NFB don't tend to admit to their mistakes.  
 Unfortunate, but
 true.
 - Original Message -
 From: kaare dehard kaare.deh...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:54 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I think your right rich, however, their attempt to do this is rather
 sad since it would be easier to just admit that they are human like
 the rest of us, that an error was made, and then not repeat this.  
 That
 certainly would have gone some ways to repairing damaged  
 credibility.
 On 2009-09-30, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to
 make up for
 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite
 admitting they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is
 what I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the  
 iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:

 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean- 
 Philippe
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to
 turn v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12

Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-03 Thread Rich Ring
My local Apple store doesn't even know that Voiceover exists, well now they do, 
because I explained it to them.
  - Original Message - 
  From: Chris Hofstader 
  To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, October 03, 2009 6:46 AM
  Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


  My thoughts exactly.  I think the people who read AT reviews fall into two 
categories: people who work for AT companies/departments and people already 
using AT who are not likely to switch but enjoy keeping up with the technology 
conversations.


  Most purchasing decisions happen almost entirely apart from the users of AT 
who rarely are even asked for input.


  An odd phenomena though, is the growth of VO and people who seem new to 
computing or new to participating in discussions about such.  Whenever a new 
person joins any of the three Apple related lists to which I subscribe, I make 
certain of taking notice of their name.  Some are people I've known for years 
from lots of different lists.  A whole lot, maybe even most, seem new to 
technology lists (I doubt too many are entirely new to computing as finding a 
list, getting signed up, etc. isn't obvious to the novice).


  I know that Apple stores are offering VO training because (I'm guessing) the 
local Lighthouse or other agencies aren't serving the Mac market.  


  I'm working on a very large proposal for a really huge project that includes 
a lot of questions about populations and numbers of users on different AT with 
a variety of different disabilities.  The only information I can get about Mac 
users with vision impairment comes from surveys which have the self selection 
problem (a lot of people do not fill out surveys) which may over or 
under-estimate MacinBlinks as we've no scientificly gathered data.  Lighthouse 
and other training centers don't count Macintosh users as they do not train 
them so, as far as that class of NGO goes, we do not really exist.


  As millions of Macs have shipped since the first VO, we've no clue how many 
blinks are using them, how they are being used, etc.


  I would estimate, though, from my entirely unscientific survey of names on 
mailing lists that Mac is hitting a previously unserved population and doing so 
well enough for the users to spend time on lists helping each other out.  


  I do not, however, know how many people are on these lists - the JAWS list 
has over 900 users last I looked and the Apple oriented seem to have a lot 
fewer.  Of course, pointing back to the top of the message, if Mac is being 
used by tons of real novices, then we have no way to get a census of VO use.


  Ah... tangled webs and the like...


  cdh   


  To wit: 


  cdh

  On Oct 2, 2009, at 5:56 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:


Apple has played the 'let the best technology win in the long run' game for 
a while. Maybe that's why they have about 5% market share. Most people don't 
care and just get what their network recommend. So those already leaning 
towards Apple will cite antagonism and those leaning away will consider it 
affirmation. Neither will move much based on one review.

CB

Cameron wrote: 
Hi.  It's depressing to think about the potential number of people who after
reading that awful so called review, will not end up giving the mac platform
a shot.  With all the work apple has done, and continues to do in terms of
out of the box accessibility, this is quite unfair.

Cameron.


 

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 7:06 AM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


I agree, but political entities, whether they are governments, political 
parties, or the NFB don't tend to admit to their mistakes. Unfortunate, but 
true.
- Original Message - 
From: kaare dehard kaare.deh...@gmail.com
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:54 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



I think your right rich, however, their attempt to do this is rather
sad since it would be easier to just admit that they are human like
the rest of us, that an error was made, and then not repeat this. That
certainly would have gone some ways to repairing damaged credibility.
On 2009-09-30, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:

  I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to
make up for
the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite
admitting they
were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is
what I
firmly believe.
- Original Message -
From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
with its touch screen.

O well - step in the right direction

Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-03 Thread Nicolai Svendsen
Hi,

Yes, same here. He knew a little about VoiceOver, but they didn't  
provide training if you required it. In fact, he didn't know how to  
turn it on, so I was glad I read through the entire VoiceOver manual  
before making the trip.

Regards,
Nic
On Oct 3, 2009, at 4:16 PM, Rich Ring wrote:

 My local Apple store doesn't even know that Voiceover exists, well  
 now they do, because I explained it to them.
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Hofstader
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, October 03, 2009 6:46 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 My thoughts exactly.  I think the people who read AT reviews fall  
 into two categories: people who work for AT companies/departments  
 and people already using AT who are not likely to switch but enjoy  
 keeping up with the technology conversations.

 Most purchasing decisions happen almost entirely apart from the  
 users of AT who rarely are even asked for input.

 An odd phenomena though, is the growth of VO and people who seem new  
 to computing or new to participating in discussions about such.   
 Whenever a new person joins any of the three Apple related lists to  
 which I subscribe, I make certain of taking notice of their name.   
 Some are people I've known for years from lots of different lists.   
 A whole lot, maybe even most, seem new to technology lists (I doubt  
 too many are entirely new to computing as finding a list, getting  
 signed up, etc. isn't obvious to the novice).

 I know that Apple stores are offering VO training because (I'm  
 guessing) the local Lighthouse or other agencies aren't serving the  
 Mac market.

 I'm working on a very large proposal for a really huge project that  
 includes a lot of questions about populations and numbers of users  
 on different AT with a variety of different disabilities.  The only  
 information I can get about Mac users with vision impairment comes  
 from surveys which have the self selection problem (a lot of people  
 do not fill out surveys) which may over or under-estimate  
 MacinBlinks as we've no scientificly gathered data.  Lighthouse and  
 other training centers don't count Macintosh users as they do not  
 train them so, as far as that class of NGO goes, we do not really  
 exist.

 As millions of Macs have shipped since the first VO, we've no clue  
 how many blinks are using them, how they are being used, etc.

 I would estimate, though, from my entirely unscientific survey of  
 names on mailing lists that Mac is hitting a previously unserved  
 population and doing so well enough for the users to spend time on  
 lists helping each other out.

 I do not, however, know how many people are on these lists - the  
 JAWS list has over 900 users last I looked and the Apple oriented  
 seem to have a lot fewer.  Of course, pointing back to the top of  
 the message, if Mac is being used by tons of real novices, then we  
 have no way to get a census of VO use.

 Ah... tangled webs and the like...

 cdh

 To wit:

 cdh
 On Oct 2, 2009, at 5:56 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:

 Apple has played the 'let the best technology win in the long run'  
 game for a while. Maybe that's why they have about 5% market share.  
 Most people don't care and just get what their network recommend.  
 So those already leaning towards Apple will cite antagonism and  
 those leaning away will consider it affirmation. Neither will move  
 much based on one review.

 CB

 Cameron wrote:

 Hi.  It's depressing to think about the potential number of people  
 who after
 reading that awful so called review, will not end up giving the  
 mac platform
 a shot.  With all the work apple has done, and continues to do in  
 terms of
 out of the box accessibility, this is quite unfair.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 7:06 AM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I agree, but political entities, whether they are governments,  
 political
 parties, or the NFB don't tend to admit to their mistakes.  
 Unfortunate, but
 true.
 - Original Message -
 From: kaare dehard kaare.deh...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:54 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I think your right rich, however, their attempt to do this is rather
 sad since it would be easier to just admit that they are human like
 the rest of us, that an error was made, and then not repeat this.  
 That
 certainly would have gone some ways to repairing damaged  
 credibility.
 On 2009-09-30, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to
 make up for
 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite
 admitting they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is
 what I
 firmly believe.
 - Original

Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-01 Thread Rich Ring

I agree, but political entities, whether they are governments, political 
parties, or the NFB don't tend to admit to their mistakes. Unfortunate, but 
true.
- Original Message - 
From: kaare dehard kaare.deh...@gmail.com
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:54 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



I think your right rich, however, their attempt to do this is rather
sad since it would be easier to just admit that they are human like
the rest of us, that an error was made, and then not repeat this. That
certainly would have gone some ways to repairing damaged credibility.
On 2009-09-30, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to
 make up for
 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite
 admitting they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is
 what I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to
 turn v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device
 accessible via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come
 with V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits



















 -- 
 Kind regards, BEN.

 email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
 msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
 web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)




 





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To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-01 Thread Chris Hofstader

As far as I have been able to discern over the years, NFB doesn't play  
games like  making up for a poor review by turning around and giving  
out a good one.  I do not always agree with NFB positions but I do  
feel that they are consistent and intellectually honest when they  
comment on a technology.

cdh
On Sep 30, 2009, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to  
 make up for
 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite  
 admitting they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is  
 what I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I  
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe  
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to  
 turn v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device  
 accessible via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.  
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.  
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is  
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has  
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks  
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits



















 -- 
 Kind regards, BEN.

 email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
 msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
 web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)




 


--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
MacVisionaries group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-10-01 Thread Chris Hofstader

Corporate slander is virtually impossible to prove in a US court.   
Also, can anyone imagine the Wall Street Journal headline, Apple Sues  
Blind Advocacy Organization Over Poor Review?

I can already feel Apple PR people choking on their morning coffee as  
they read this example on this mailing list let alone seeing it in WSJ  
or New York Times.  The editorial bias will be: Apple Corp (AAPL),  
the Silicon Valley based  multi-billion dollar corporation has set its  
notoriously ruthless legal team loose on America's largest advocacy  
group for people with vision impairment.  Long time NFB technology  
leader, Curtis Chong said, We call them as we see them and unlike  
some other advocacy organizations whom I won't name here, we don't  
sugar coat reviews of products we find to be lacking.  We do not want  
our members to accidentally purchase an inferior product because we  
gave it what appeared to be a positive nod when we didn't believe it  
to be true.

Sandy Beaches, a spokesperson for Apple, said, I've a Glock  9 mm  
pointed at my temple and I promise I'll pull the trigger if our legal  
team doesn't back off the nice people at NFB who have just given us a  
really terrific award for our efforts on the iPhone.  I mean it, I'll  
blow my head off live on YouTube if our guys don't back off, said the  
distraught PR professional.
On Sep 30, 2009, at 7:24 PM, Frank Ventura wrote:


 Actually, Apple should have sued the NFB for slander and loss of
 revenue. Now wouldn't that be poetic justice.
 Frank

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Cameron
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 6:19 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: RE: iPhone honored by NFB


 Hi.  yes, that poorly researched and non objective so called review of
 voiceover should have been formally retracted, along with an apology,
 but,
 that did not, and probably will not, come to pass.

 Unfortunately.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:15 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to  
 make up
 for

 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite admitting
 they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is  
 what
 I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn
 v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible
 via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is  
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with
 V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring

Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread Rich Ring

I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to make up for 
the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite admitting they 
were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is what I 
firmly believe.
- Original Message - 
From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
with its touch screen.

O well - step in the right direction anyway.

On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o 
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not 
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 












 



-- 
Kind regards, BEN.

email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)




--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
MacVisionaries group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
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RE: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread Cameron

Hi.  yes, that poorly researched and non objective so called review of
voiceover should have been formally retracted, along with an apology, but,
that did not, and probably will not, come to pass.

Unfortunetly.

Cameron.




-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:15 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to make up for

the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite admitting they 
were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is what I 
firmly believe.
- Original Message - 
From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
with its touch screen.

O well - step in the right direction anyway.

On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o 
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not 
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 












 



-- 
Kind regards, BEN.

email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)






--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
MacVisionaries group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en
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RE: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread Frank Ventura

Actually, Apple should have sued the NFB for slander and loss of
revenue. Now wouldn't that be poetic justice.
Frank

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Cameron
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 6:19 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: RE: iPhone honored by NFB


Hi.  yes, that poorly researched and non objective so called review of
voiceover should have been formally retracted, along with an apology,
but,
that did not, and probably will not, come to pass.

Unfortunetly.

Cameron.




-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:15 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to make up
for

the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite admitting
they 
were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is what
I 
firmly believe.
- Original Message - 
From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
with its touch screen.

O well - step in the right direction anyway.

On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe
Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn
v o 
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible
via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not 
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.
That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with
V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for
a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 












 



-- 
Kind regards, BEN.

email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)








--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
MacVisionaries group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread chris polk

omg that would have been funny!!!

On Sep 30, 2009, at 4:24 PM, Frank Ventura wrote:


 Actually, Apple should have sued the NFB for slander and loss of
 revenue. Now wouldn't that be poetic justice.
 Frank

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Cameron
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 6:19 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: RE: iPhone honored by NFB


 Hi.  yes, that poorly researched and non objective so called review of
 voiceover should have been formally retracted, along with an apology,
 but,
 that did not, and probably will not, come to pass.

 Unfortunetly.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:15 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to  
 make up
 for

 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite admitting
 they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is  
 what
 I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn
 v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible
 via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is  
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with
 V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for
 a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits



















 -- 
 Kind regards, BEN.

 email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
 msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
 web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)








 


--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
MacVisionaries group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en
-~--~~~~--~~--~--~---



Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread kaare dehard

I think your right rich, however, their attempt to do this is rather  
sad since it would be easier to just admit that they are human like  
the rest of us, that an error was made, and then not repeat this. That  
certainly would have gone some ways to repairing damaged credibility.
On 2009-09-30, at 7:14 PM, Rich Ring wrote:


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to  
 make up for
 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite  
 admitting they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is  
 what I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I  
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe  
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to  
 turn v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device  
 accessible via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.  
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.  
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is  
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has  
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks  
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits



















 -- 
 Kind regards, BEN.

 email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
 msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
 web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)




 


--~--~-~--~~~---~--~~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
MacVisionaries group.
To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en
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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread Maurice Mines

stop it this this a tech list not a politcel one. using the del key.
On Sep 30, 2009, at 5:24 PM, Frank Ventura wrote:


 Actually, Apple should have sued the NFB for slander and loss of
 revenue. Now wouldn't that be poetic justice.
 Frank

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Cameron
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 6:19 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: RE: iPhone honored by NFB


 Hi.  yes, that poorly researched and non objective so called review of
 voiceover should have been formally retracted, along with an apology,
 but,
 that did not, and probably will not, come to pass.

 Unfortunetly.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:15 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to  
 make up
 for

 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite admitting
 they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is  
 what
 I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn
 v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible
 via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is  
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with
 V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for
 a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits



















 -- 
 Kind regards, BEN.

 email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
 msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
 web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)








 


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-30 Thread chris polk

lol

On Sep 30, 2009, at 9:10 PM, Maurice Mines wrote:


 stop it this this a tech list not a politcel one. using the del key.
 On Sep 30, 2009, at 5:24 PM, Frank Ventura wrote:


 Actually, Apple should have sued the NFB for slander and loss of
 revenue. Now wouldn't that be poetic justice.
 Frank

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Cameron
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 6:19 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: RE: iPhone honored by NFB


 Hi.  yes, that poorly researched and non objective so called review  
 of
 voiceover should have been formally retracted, along with an apology,
 but,
 that did not, and probably will not, come to pass.

 Unfortunetly.

 Cameron.




 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rich Ring
 Sent: Wednesday, September 30, 2009 7:15 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 I believe that what you're seeing here is that they're trying to
 make up
 for

 the grave error they made with the Mac without in fact quite  
 admitting
 they
 were wrong.  You have to read between the lines a bit, but this is
 what
 I
 firmly believe.
 - Original Message -
 From: ben mustill-rose bmustillr...@gmail.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 6:34 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



 I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
 device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the  
 iphone
 with its touch screen.

 O well - step in the right direction anyway.

 On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I
 think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to  
 turn
 v o
 on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device  
 accessible
 via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice  
 (not
 Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls.
 That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
 Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is
 no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come
 with
 V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known  
 from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an  
 evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks  
 for
 a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for  
 the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits



















 -- 
 Kind regards, BEN.

 email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
 msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
 web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)











 


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-28 Thread Chris Blouch
Right, so you either need to have sighted assistance to choose Settings 
- General - Accessibility - VoiceOver on/off. Or, if you have 
Voiceover turned on when you sync the phone to your Mac it will turn VO 
on in the phone. Once you have VO turned on, assuming you have or will 
updated to the 3.1 OS rev, you should also turn on the triple-click-home 
tap to turn VO on and off which is also on the Accessibility settings pane.

CB

kaare dehard wrote:
 or you can hook it up and turn it on in itunes I believe.
 On 2009-09-25, at 7:27 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:

 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 *From:* macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] *On Behalf Of
 *Jean-Philippe Rykiel
 *Sent:* Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 *To:* macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 *Subject:* Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to
 turn v o on and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel

 - Original Message -
 *From:* Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 *To:* macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 *Subject:* Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device
 accessible via speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with
 a different voice (not Alex) and a phone-specific set of
 gestures instead of keyboard controls. That said, it's
 included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch.
 Previous models didn't have the hardware performance to run
 this so there is no upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:
 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone
 come with V O as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel

 - Original Message -
 *From:* Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 *To:* macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 *Subject:* Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by
 definition, not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of
 what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than
 an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as
 the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed.
 Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement
 framework has failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been
 measuring sharks for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take
 time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
  they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
  hyppocrits
 
 
  
   









 

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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-26 Thread Krister Ekstrom


25 sep 2009 kl. 22.28 skrev william lomas:

 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits

That's exactly my thought too. Why praise one thing and diss the other?
/Krister

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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-26 Thread hank smith

its about time nfb did some good for a change
- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch cblo...@aol.com
To: MacVisionaries macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 11:53 AM
Subject: iPhone honored by NFB



 I didn't notice this mentioned on the list previously. I was one of the
 speakers at the NFB Web Accessibility Day in Baltimore MD on Tuesday and
 during the lunch Marc Maurer, President of the NFB, gave out some awards
 to companies they felt were leaders in the accessibility space. In
 particular they gave an award of commendation to Apple for the iPhone
 and iPod touch for doing what many folks said could not be done - to
 make a touch screen UI fully accessible. I know that the NFB in the past
 has been a follower in recognizing the feat of design and engineering
 that accessibility on the iPhone is but it sounds like at least the top
 brass are now fully aware as Dr. Maurer gave clear praise to Apple and
 the work done there. Lets hope NFB now give full and fair promotion in
 the rest of its communications.

 http://www.nfb.org/nfb/NewsBot.asp?MODE=VIEWID=468SnID=1364143865

 As a side note, it was interesting to overhear the questions folks had
 of the Apple rep before and after the presentation. Some wanted to know
 more or how it worked (apparently having never tried an iPhone/iPod
 Touch). The Apple rep also pointed out that the gesture technology has
 been backported to Snow Leopard for use with trackpads which was warmly
 received. I'm sure everyone on this list is fully aware of these things
 but it kind of surprised me that a room full of accessibility 'experts'
 were so unaware.

 CB

  


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-26 Thread Buddy Brannan

Oh, and this isn't at all inflamatory.
--
Buddy Brannan, KB5ELV - Erie, PA
Phone: (814) 860-3194 or 888-75-BUDDY



On Sep 26, 2009, at 11:05 PM, hank smith wrote:


 its about time nfb did some good for a change
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch cblo...@aol.com
 To: MacVisionaries macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 11:53 AM
 Subject: iPhone honored by NFB



 I didn't notice this mentioned on the list previously. I was one of  
 the
 speakers at the NFB Web Accessibility Day in Baltimore MD on  
 Tuesday and
 during the lunch Marc Maurer, President of the NFB, gave out some  
 awards
 to companies they felt were leaders in the accessibility space. In
 particular they gave an award of commendation to Apple for the iPhone
 and iPod touch for doing what many folks said could not be done - to
 make a touch screen UI fully accessible. I know that the NFB in the  
 past
 has been a follower in recognizing the feat of design and engineering
 that accessibility on the iPhone is but it sounds like at least the  
 top
 brass are now fully aware as Dr. Maurer gave clear praise to Apple  
 and
 the work done there. Lets hope NFB now give full and fair promotion  
 in
 the rest of its communications.

 http://www.nfb.org/nfb/NewsBot.asp?MODE=VIEWID=468SnID=1364143865

 As a side note, it was interesting to overhear the questions folks  
 had
 of the Apple rep before and after the presentation. Some wanted to  
 know
 more or how it worked (apparently having never tried an iPhone/iPod
 Touch). The Apple rep also pointed out that the gesture technology  
 has
 been backported to Snow Leopard for use with trackpads which was  
 warmly
 received. I'm sure everyone on this list is fully aware of these  
 things
 but it kind of surprised me that a room full of accessibility  
 'experts'
 were so unaware.

 CB




 


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-26 Thread Christina
I am surprised and happy with their response to the iphone with  
voiceover.  I wonder if NFB will benefit somehow from the accessible  
iphone.
On Sep 25, 2009, at 6:41 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:

 Yes, but you'd have to turn it on using the iTunes acount to which  
 the iPhone is conected. So, you'd have to use the iPhone owner's  
 computer and iTunes acount, not JPR's.
 K.
 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com  
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of kaare dehard
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 8:17 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 or you can hook it up and turn it on in itunes I believe.
 On 2009-09-25, at 7:27 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:

 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I  
 think.
 K.
 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com  
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe  
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to  
 turn v o on and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device  
 accessible via speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a  
 different voice (not Alex) and a phone-specific set of gestures  
 instead of keyboard controls. That said, it's included on every  
 iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous models didn't have  
 the hardware performance to run this so there is no upgrade to get  
 VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with V O as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known  
 from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an  
 evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has  
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks  
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for  
 the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
  they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
  hyppocrits
 
 
  
 










 


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iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Chris Blouch

I didn't notice this mentioned on the list previously. I was one of the 
speakers at the NFB Web Accessibility Day in Baltimore MD on Tuesday and 
during the lunch Marc Maurer, President of the NFB, gave out some awards 
to companies they felt were leaders in the accessibility space. In 
particular they gave an award of commendation to Apple for the iPhone 
and iPod touch for doing what many folks said could not be done - to 
make a touch screen UI fully accessible. I know that the NFB in the past 
has been a follower in recognizing the feat of design and engineering 
that accessibility on the iPhone is but it sounds like at least the top 
brass are now fully aware as Dr. Maurer gave clear praise to Apple and 
the work done there. Lets hope NFB now give full and fair promotion in 
the rest of its communications.

http://www.nfb.org/nfb/NewsBot.asp?MODE=VIEWID=468SnID=1364143865

As a side note, it was interesting to overhear the questions folks had 
of the Apple rep before and after the presentation. Some wanted to know 
more or how it worked (apparently having never tried an iPhone/iPod 
Touch). The Apple rep also pointed out that the gesture technology has 
been backported to Snow Leopard for use with trackpads which was warmly 
received. I'm sure everyone on this list is fully aware of these things 
but it kind of surprised me that a room full of accessibility 'experts' 
were so unaware.

CB

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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Justin Harford

Sweet.
On Sep 25, 2009, at 11:53 AM, Chris Blouch wrote:


 I didn't notice this mentioned on the list previously. I was one of  
 the
 speakers at the NFB Web Accessibility Day in Baltimore MD on Tuesday  
 and
 during the lunch Marc Maurer, President of the NFB, gave out some  
 awards
 to companies they felt were leaders in the accessibility space. In
 particular they gave an award of commendation to Apple for the iPhone
 and iPod touch for doing what many folks said could not be done - to
 make a touch screen UI fully accessible. I know that the NFB in the  
 past
 has been a follower in recognizing the feat of design and engineering
 that accessibility on the iPhone is but it sounds like at least the  
 top
 brass are now fully aware as Dr. Maurer gave clear praise to Apple and
 the work done there. Lets hope NFB now give full and fair promotion in
 the rest of its communications.

 http://www.nfb.org/nfb/NewsBot.asp?MODE=VIEWID=468SnID=1364143865

 As a side note, it was interesting to overhear the questions folks had
 of the Apple rep before and after the presentation. Some wanted to  
 know
 more or how it worked (apparently having never tried an iPhone/iPod
 Touch). The Apple rep also pointed out that the gesture technology has
 been backported to Snow Leopard for use with trackpads which was  
 warmly
 received. I'm sure everyone on this list is fully aware of these  
 things
 but it kind of surprised me that a room full of accessibility  
 'experts'
 were so unaware.

 CB

 


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread william lomas

they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
hyppocrits


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Chris Blouch

Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
definition of 'good' to be redefined.

CB

william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 
   

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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Jean-Philippe Rykiel
Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O as 
well?
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel

  - Original Message - 
  From: Chris Blouch 
  To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
  Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



  Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
  well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
  the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
  the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
  what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
  rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
  and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
  long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
  definition of 'good' to be redefined.

  CB

  william lomas wrote:
   they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
   hyppocrits
  
  
   
 

  
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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Chris Blouch
It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible 
via speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice 
(not Alex) and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard 
controls. That said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer 
iPod Touch. Previous models didn't have the hardware performance to run 
this so there is no upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

CB

Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:
 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with 
 V O as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel

 - Original Message -
 *From:* Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 *To:* macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 mailto:macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 *Sent:* Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 *Subject:* Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
  they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
  hyppocrits
 
 
  
   


 

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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Justin Harford
Uh yeah.
On Sep 25, 2009, at 2:59 PM, Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with V O as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has  
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks  
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
  they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
  hyppocrits
 
 
  
 


 


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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Jean-Philippe Rykiel
Dear Chris,
a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o on 
and off on his device so I can give it a try. 
Cheers,
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel

  - Original Message - 
  From: Chris Blouch 
  To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
  Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


  It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via 
speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not Alex) and 
a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That said, it's 
included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous models didn't 
have the hardware performance to run this so there is no upgrade to get VO on 
the older devices.

  CB

  Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote: 
Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O 
as well?
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel

  - Original Message - 
  From: Chris Blouch 
  To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
  Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB



  Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
  well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
  the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
  the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
  what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
  rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
  and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
  long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
  definition of 'good' to be redefined.

  CB

  william lomas wrote:
   they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
   hyppocrits
  
  
   
 





  

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RE: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Kevin Gibbs
You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
K.

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Dear Chris,
a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o on
and off on his device so I can give it a try. 
Cheers,
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com  
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via
speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not Alex)
and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That
said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous
models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

CB

Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote: 

Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
as well?
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com  
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
definition of 'good' to be redefined.

CB

william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 
   











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To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread ben mustill-rose

I do find it rather funny that they slammed a program that ran on a
device with a full sized qwerty keyboard yet there all over the iphone
with its touch screen.

O well - step in the right direction anyway.

On 26/09/2009, Kevin Gibbs kevj...@gmail.com wrote:
 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
 K.

 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o on
 and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via
 speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not Alex)
 and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That
 said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous
 models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
 upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
 as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 












 



-- 
Kind regards, BEN.

email: bmustillr...@gmail.com
msn: benmustillr...@hotmail.com
web: http://www.bmr.me.uk (under construction)

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Re: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread kaare dehard
or you can hook it up and turn it on in itunes I believe.
On 2009-09-25, at 7:27 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:

 You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I  
 think.
 K.
 -Original Message-
 From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com  
 [mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe  
 Rykiel
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 Dear Chris,
 a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to  
 turn v o on and off on his device so I can give it a try.
 Cheers,
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

 It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device  
 accessible via speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a  
 different voice (not Alex) and a phone-specific set of gestures  
 instead of keyboard controls. That said, it's included on every  
 iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous models didn't have the  
 hardware performance to run this so there is no upgrade to get VO on  
 the older devices.

 CB

 Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote:

 Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come  
 with V O as well?
 JPR
 http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel
 - Original Message -
 From: Chris Blouch
 To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
 Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
 Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


 Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition,  
 not
 well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from
 the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution
 the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of
 what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more
 rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has  
 failed
 and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks  
 for a
 long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the
 definition of 'good' to be redefined.

 CB

 william lomas wrote:
  they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
  hyppocrits
 
 
  
 






 


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RE: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Kevin Gibbs
The new iPhone 3GS comes with VO.  That's some of what's so cool about it.
 

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 4:59 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
as well?
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com  
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
definition of 'good' to be redefined.

CB

william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 
   






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RE: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Kevin Gibbs
Yes, but you'd have to turn it on using the iTunes acount to which the
iPhone is conected. So, you'd have to use the iPhone owner's computer and
iTunes acount, not JPR's.
K.

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of kaare dehard
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 8:17 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


or you can hook it up and turn it on in itunes I believe.

On 2009-09-25, at 7:27 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:


You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
K.

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Dear Chris,
a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o on
and off on his device so I can give it a try. 
Cheers,
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com  
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via
speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not Alex)
and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That
said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous
models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

CB

Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote: 

Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
as well?
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com  
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
definition of 'good' to be redefined.

CB

william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 
   















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FW: iPhone honored by NFB

2009-09-25 Thread Kevin Gibbs
I guess I was misaken, JPR.  Read this from Alex.
 
-Original Message-
From: Alex Jurgensen [mailto:asquare...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:35 PM
To: Kevin Gibbs
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Hi, 
Kevin:

You can use any old iTunes. It won't ask you to sync, or do any harm. It
will just let you turn on Universal Access features.

Please post this to the list, as I can't. Of course if you don't mind.

Regards,
Alex,


Alex Jurgensen,
AWEBSIGHT Administrator,
ICE Customer Care,
VoiceOver Trainer,
asquare...@visionmail.uni.cc 

Visit us on the web at: http://www.visionmail.uni.cc/

On 2009-09-25, at 6:41 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:


Yes, but you'd have to turn it on using the iTunes acount to which the
iPhone is conected. So, you'd have to use the iPhone owner's computer and
iTunes acount, not JPR's.
K.

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of kaare dehard
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 8:17 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


or you can hook it up and turn it on in itunes I believe.

On 2009-09-25, at 7:27 PM, Kevin Gibbs wrote:


You have to ask the sighted friend to turn it on in preferences, I think.
K.

-Original Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
[mailto:macvisionar...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Jean-Philippe Rykiel
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 5:30 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Dear Chris,
a friend of mine has one of these. Can you simply tell me how to turn v o on
and off on his device so I can give it a try. 
Cheers,
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris  mailto:cblo...@aol.com Blouch 
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, September 26, 2009 12:05 AM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB

It's called voiceover and as something that makes a device accessible via
speech and controls, it is voiceover, but with a different voice (not Alex)
and a phone-specific set of gestures instead of keyboard controls. That
said, it's included on every iPhone 3GS and the newer iPod Touch. Previous
models didn't have the hardware performance to run this so there is no
upgrade to get VO on the older devices.

CB

Jean-Philippe Rykiel wrote: 

Sorry for a very down-to-earth question, but does the IPhone come with V O
as well?
JPR
http://myspace.com/jeanphilipperykiel


- Original Message - 
From: Chris Blouch mailto:cblo...@aol.com  
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com 
Sent: Friday, September 25, 2009 10:48 PM
Subject: Re: iPhone honored by NFB


Some have difficulty comprehending what is new and, by definition, not 
well understood. So they define the new in terms of what's known from 
the past, but when something is a revolution rather than an evolution 
the comparisons fail. Some will lodge those failures as the fault of 
what was being measured and dismiss it as being flawed. Others, more 
rarely, will correctly realize that the measurement framework has failed 
and reevaluate their worldview. The NFB has been measuring sharks for a 
long while and Apple brought in an leopard. It will take time for the 
definition of 'good' to be redefined.

CB

william lomas wrote:
 they can soon praise the iPhone yet slam the mac?
 hyppocrits


 
   

















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