Hi Mike,
That is exactly what I'm saying, and you would've had to hire someone for
only 10 minutes in order to figure this B**T out, not the 30 minutes you
think.
Keep in mind that I used to be s sighted computer user and so these mouse
tips are strictly from memory, I'm sure if you asked
- Original Message -
From: dgcnc dg...@bellsouth.net
To: blind-computing@jaws-users.com
Sent: Thursday, March 08, 2012 2:08 PM
Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing]
SelectingContinuousNon-ContinuousFilesUsingAMouse
I have spent years trying to figure this out! Thank you. Now, when would
you cut and when
:
[Blind-Computing]SelectingContinuousNon-ContinuousFilesUsingAMouse
HI,
You will normally use the copy command when you want a copy in two different
folders. That is, you're copying a file from folder A and storing it in
folder B as might be the case when backing up your files to a thumb drive
PM
To: blind-computing@jaws-users.com
Subject: Re:
[Blind-Computing]SelectingContinuousNon-ContinuousFilesUsingAMouse
HI,
You will normally use the copy command when you want a copy in two
different
folders. That is, you're copying a file from folder A and storing it in
folder B as might
, 2012 4:39 PM
Subject: Re:
[Blind-Computing]SelectingContinuousNon-ContinuousFilesUsingAMouse
Hi Greg,
yes, your understanding is correct. It is just like copying or cutting
text
in a word processor such as Microsoft Word.
- Original Message -
From: dgcnc dg...@bellsouth.net
-computing@jaws-users.com
Subject: Re: [Blind-Computing]
SelectingContinuousNon-ContinuousFilesUsingAMouse
I have spent years trying to figure this out! Thank you. Now, when would you
cut and when would you copy? I know they are control x and control c
respectively but don't know when to use what