Anyone here has any experience, or know the rules?
I am trying to get hold of a copy of MS Office, and thought I might save
a few dollars, on buying one of the former versions. Got some offer
here, for unopened and fully licensed versions, but got confused about
their titles.
One says Home
Is not windoweyesforoffice still available?
On Sun, 30 Jun 2019 13:20:05 -0400,
Sky Mundell via Talk wrote:
>
> Sadly that is true. Fortunately there is no chance Vispero can do that with
> NVDA because NVDA is an open source project so if the developers of that
> project stop development,
Sadly that is true. Fortunately there is no chance Vispero can do that with
NVDA because NVDA is an open source project so if the developers of that
project stop development, folks can pick up where the developers left off.
-Original Message-
From: Talk
I wish I could still get a copy of Window-Eyes. Is there a way to get
it? Thanks!
--
‘I had rather stand with God and be judged by the world, than to stand
with the world and be judged by God.’ "You can't be part of a
denomination and follow the Bible and you can't be part of the Church
of
Oh, believe me, there are numerous cases where WinEyes is superior. Got
several websites, besides some applications here, where NVDA simply
won't catch up. And some of them, Jaws just doesn't work whatsoever on
some of them.
But to be fair, NVDA has helped me out on a few places, where
There are things window-eyes still does better. On Amazon.com, for
example, n v d a doesn't show me the buy now button, where window-eyes
does.
73
Butch
WA0VJR
Node 3148
Wallace, ks.
On Sat, 29 Jun 2019, Pamela Dominguez via Talk wrote:
That's a shame, too, because I think window eyes is
Though I too think it is sad to see WinEyes is going to go down the
drain, we have to face the fact.
Yet, some of you have promoted the idea, that someone, at some point of
time, would get hold of the code, and then resurrect the screen reader.
True, it is a mere dream. Likely that code might
I agree, Pam. What a waste. But that's how it works in business. Look at
the big boys: Apple, Microsoft, Google, and Amazon. They spend hundreds
of millions every year just buying anything that may be the faintest
competition so they can throw it away, or, on the rare occasion,
incorporate it