I think it would be a shame to lose the ability to script VoiceOver.
I work with the Veteran Administration Blind Rehab service and am
interested in helping older Veterans learn to use the Mac  -- either
because they were Mac users before losing vision or because they are
just getting into computing and need a simple interface.  For the
elderly, problems with memory are at least a great an issue as
problems with vision, and anything we can do to make important
everyday computing tasks easier for elderly people with vision loss
will greatly increase their adoption of the Macintosh.   The ability
to collapse many steps involving several applications into one or two
steps is vital to this effort.  As one who has struggled to teach
Windows screen readers to elderly Veterans for decades, I can't tell
you how excited I am by VoiceOver's new tools in Snow Leopard --
AppleScript among them.


On Sep 7, 10:32 am, "James & Nash" <james.austin1...@googlemail.com>
wrote:
> Absolutely, I think the thing to remember, is that the scripts are an option
> and only an option. Developers are still going to have to make their apps
> accessible, especially now that most if not all of the operating system is
> now Coaco. I quite like the idea of these scripts. Perhaps we can add our
> own features to VO just a they do for Orca which is also an extensible
> scriptable Screen Reader.
>
> Perhaps others who are more informed on these subjects could add to or
> corect me if I'm wrong.
>
> Take care
>
> James
>
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Ryan Mann" <tiger0...@earthlink.net>
> To: <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com>
> Sent: Monday, September 07, 2009 6:25 PM
> Subject: Re: Voice Over with Apple Scripts, must get this off my chest
>
> > I think that if you don't like using scripts with screen readers, then
> > don't use them.  It's silly to ask Apple to take out a feature of
> > VoiceOver that some people might want.  If the mac gets more popular,
> > some blind people might have to use an application for a job.  If that
> > application doesn't work out of the box, custome scripts should be an
> > option.
> > n Sep 7, 2009, at 1:17 PM, Jes Smith wrote:
>
> >> That sounds like a good idea.
>
> >> On Sep 7, 2009, at 12:58 PM, dannyboy wrote:
>
> >>> I am in full agreement that voice over needs not to be full of
> >>> scripts
> >>> to do everything for us.  Maybe we could write to
> >>> accessibil...@apple.com
> >>> and share our thoughts on this.
> >>> On Sep 7, 2009, at 7:52 AM, Jes Smith wrote:
>
> >>>> Hi all.
>
> >>>> I am greatly concerned that voice over now has support for
> >>>> scripting.
> >>>> Especially now that you can make voice over launch an application
> >>>> with
> >>>> a single script. I'm not talking about glancing at the time or
> >>>> seeing
> >>>> how many unread messages you have in mail. I'm talking about opening
> >>>> up apps like mail or Safari from within Voice OVer. I am concerned
> >>>> that voice over is starting to become a bit like Jaws, and that if
> >>>> we
> >>>> don't get a grip on it now, voice over will become Jaws for
> >>>> Macintosh.
> >>>> I, like Mike Arrigo, don't feel that launching apps is something
> >>>> that
> >>>> should be implemented in a screen reader. Also, I fear that the use
> >>>> of
> >>>> apple scripts will replace the responsibility of an application
> >>>> developer to make their application accessible right out of the box.
> >>>> On the Windows side, if something isn't accessible with Jaws, you
> >>>> just
> >>>> download scripts for it. What if you go to another person's computer
> >>>> and they don't have the scripts for the app you are trying to use?
> >>>> It's my belief that a certain article from the NFB prompted this
> >>>> scripting support. Folks, the thing I like about voice over is that
> >>>> it
> >>>> gives the blind user the same conceptual layout and information as
> >>>> it
> >>>> appears on the screen to a sighted user. No other screen reader does
> >>>> this, and we should keep voice over as a screen reader, and let it
> >>>> be.
> >>>> If we don't, eventually, when we try and contact an Apple developer,
> >>>> they will either ignore us, or will say, "Well, just download the
> >>>> scripts for my application and you will have access."
> >>>> Any thoughts? If someone disagrees with me, I'd love to hear your
> >>>> arguments, not so that I can persuade you to agree with me, but so
> >>>> that I can have a new perspective.
>
> >>>> Jes
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