Hi! I actually use NVDA on an everyday basis at this point, and I've found I can work with NVDA's object navigation as a substitute for JAWS virtual cursor and all those other cursors JAWS has. I actually find it a lot easier to use, and it gives me a much better overview. I haven't found JAWS to work that great with web applications either. Further, in NVDA 2013.1 NVDA receives more support for Powerpoint applications and general Office improvements, and that's actually working out quite well. At this rate I'm finding applications that work better with NVDA, but I'd be curious to know which ones you use often so I can file tickets and look into it. NVDA is open source, after all. NVDA add-ons are very handy here, and they're just like JAWS scripts.
I don't plan to purchase my SMA for JAWS again, even if I'd had different results than what I'm getting. I'd have to pay four SMAs to get my license up-to-date, just in order to retain my serial number. That would cost $195 less than the standard license since their SMAs cost $200 now, but it's still not worth it since things work pretty well for me at the moment. Plus, I hardly need researching features in a screen-reading application, but I do think Flexible Web is kind of interesting. You don't need that with VoiceOver because a lot of these advertisements are contained within frames so VoiceOver needs to interact first, but NVDA and JAWS don't. NVDA does if you use object navigation, but NVDA groups lists and other elements together which means you have to interact with it to read their content. I've mostly seen this with lists though, so I suppose you could use that to navigate if it's a big deal, but it's still a pretty interesting feature.. Both JAWS and NVDA rely on MSAA/IAccessible2, so you should actually get pretty similar results unless the controls require extra work as is the case with Powerpoint with both screen readers, so JAWS isn't excluded here. MSAA, for instance, does not provide sufficient information. It does not allow you to retrieve the location of the cursor, or retrieve individual units of text in an editable text field, which is part of the issues with inaccessible applications using these APIs. Anyway, I won't go on a technical rant, so I hope this kind of makes sense! Regards, Nicolai On Apr 6, 2013, at 8:57 AM, Dane Trethowan <[email protected]> wrote: > You're quite right! there is a bit of Freedom Science Fiction bashing and > with good reason, who can forget that disgraceful episode when Freedom > Scientology took GW Micro to court over the issue of place markers, I believe > that particular case was settled out of court. > > Then there's the other case of Freedom Science Fiction deliberately trying to > take a company out of business just because they had a name which just > happened to use the word "Freedom" in it. > > Thankfully the people at System Access had sense enough not to be intimidated > and they changed their name, the rest of course is history, that being we now > have yet another Screen Reader for Windows in the form of System Access, yet > more competition to JAWS, Window-Eyes and so on which can only be a good > thing. > > Despite all the bashing as you put it, I'm prepared to give credit where its > due and express my view thus, unless GW Micro do something such as a rewrite > of many parts of Window-Eyes then they're going to see themselves swamped! by > the competition and that's not a good thing. > > I was most interested to hear your opinions on the Mac and I'm sorry you > didn't get too far with that however I acknowledge without hesitation that > the Mac is not for everything and I'm very pleased you tried it rather than > pretending to try it and deliberately putting obstacles or doubts in your way > and into other peoples minds. > > I use a variety of platforms here for a variety of reasons and all have their > good and bad points, advantages and disadvantages, likes and dislikes, > pleasures and pains, weakness and strengths... well you get the drift <smile>. > > > On 06/04/2013, at 2:34 PM, David Griffith <[email protected]> wrote: > >> I know that Freedom Scientific bashing has been in vogue over the last few >> years. They are a commercial company and do not appear to have always >> unstinctingly operate in their customers best interests. Nevertheless I have >> been, in practice, reliant on their implementations of Jaws since 2006. >> >> As, with others, I have resented the annual upgrage fee I have tried to >> make the break firstly with experimenting with exclusive use of NVDA on >> Windows, and then secondly by purchasing an iMac for voiceover usage. Sadly >> in both circumstances I have had to return to windows and Jaws for serious >> Office productivity taks. When the pressure is on, and the chips are down, >> jaws is what I rely upon. I now conclude that in order to retain this >> productivity edge the yearly Upgrade cost for Jaws is sadly the price I >> have to pay. There is no feasible way I could nowadays, for example , rely >> upon Jaws 11, NVDA or voiceover. >> >> I cannot comment on Window eyes as I have never used it. >> Genrally though, with some exceptions, Jaws continues to provide the maximum >> accessibility for me. >> Whilst if I had to, I could survive without forking out for Jaws every year, >> and use NVDA, I would need at least a demo copy of Jaws to assist me with >> difficult access. >> >> The lack of a virtual screen cursor in NVDA means that there are some >> situations where only Jaws wil do. >> >> There are a few happy circumstances where NVDA will outperform Jaws, for >> example in gaining limited access to the generally inaccessible Calibre >> Ebook software, but these are the exception rather than the rule. >> Where access is difficult only Jaws can often solve problems. >> For example the other week I had an inaccessible interface to deal with , >> The Adobe Music Importer for the Amazon cloud Player. >> Using Virtual OCR, and then reviewing the results with the Jaws cursor and >> performing virtual mouse clicks I was able to get some functionality out of >> a program which would have been impossible with NVDA or Voiceover on the >> Mac. It was clunky, requiring me to run OCR multiple times as the screen >> was updated but I got it to work after a fashion. >> More importanly, For Office productivity, Jaws and Microsoft Office remains >> the only serious option for me. >> I am managing to stick with Office 2003 but I am heavily reliant on Jaws for >> table management, header and style management, index and content creation >> and so on. >> I also have become increasingly reliant on the Jaws text Analyser tool over >> the last 24 months to produce professional looking output. I know of no >> screen reader which provides equivalent text analysis functionality, though >> it is possible Window Eyes does. Certainly NVDA and voiceover on the Mac do >> not cut the mustard here. It was not until I started to use Text analyser a >> couple of years ago that I realised the formatting and presentational errors >> I was creating. My reliance on sighted proof reading has plummetted since I >> started utilising this and other tools. >> >> A similar experience is provided on the web. Whilst NVDA and Voiceover >> provide feasible web access, and occasionally outperform Jaws, in genral >> only Jaws will do. >> >> The bafflingly complicated and restricted text selection limtations of >> Safari with Voiceover make it impractical for rapid academic searches. Some >> elements, including some headers are impossible to select and copy with >> Voiceover except by using last phrase copied. It is impossible to copy more >> than a paragraph because of the text interactional limits unless you want to >> select and copy the entire web page. I could survive with various strategies >> with Safari and Voiceover but it just takes too much time to flexibly >> extract the content of web pages I need. NVDA is better and sometimes more >> stable but I find the fasterst browsing experience remains with jaws. >> >> I invested a lot of time looking at the potential of NVDA and voiceover as >> alternatives to Jaws. In practice still I play with Voiceover and NVDA, but >> work with Jaws. I wish it were not so and that the fre screen reading >> alternatives provided feasible office comdpetition that I could rely upon. >> At the moment they do not. Nobody has ever been able to demonstrate to me >> that the Mac currently a viable serious Office platform for a blind user, >> though some limited functionality is certainly possible if your needs are >> not that great and you are prepared to work at it. >> I saw only yesterday somebody trying to defend Office functionality on the >> mac by saying she simply bans people from sending table formatted matgerial >> to her. This is not a serious response and would be considered eccentric >> and probelmatic in most of the jobs I have done over the years. It is only >> a feasible response if you want to remain a non professinal amateur dabbling >> on the fringes of access. A strategy reliant on instructing the Department >> of Health not to use tables in the material they sent to me when I was an >> NHS Manager is so absurd as to be ridiculous. >> In practice whilst using NVDA on a Windows platform is more feasible than >> voiceover on the Mac for office usage, it also lacks some crucial tools. >> >> David Griffith >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: [email protected] >> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dane Trethowan >> Sent: 06 April 2013 02:54 >> To: Windows Access; Share Your Enthusiasm! >> Subject: The Word Is Out! >> >> Okay, I'm not afraid whatever to admit if I'm wrong and I certainly have >> been wrong when it comes to good Screen Reading software, JAWS and >> Window-Eyes. >> >> I've been using JAWS 13.0 for the last 4 weeks or so and - in my opinion - >> accessibility to Windows software thanks to JAWS blows GW Micro away and >> that's a shame as Window-Eyes is far behind in several crucial areas. >> >> the most obvious is the Internet browsing facilities, and another is >> training material - material to help new and old users alike - become >> familiar with the Screen Reader and associated Windows Applications, >> concepts etc. >> >> Most people on list would know what I'm talking about so I needen't say any >> more but I will say that I've decided to put my money where my mouth is, I >> ordered JAWS yesterday. >> >> >> >> ********** >> >> Dane Trethowan >> Skype: grtdane12 >> Phone US (213) 438-9741 >> Phone Australia (03) 9005 8589 >> >> >> >> ======================================= >> >> To post to this group, please send your message to: >> [email protected] >> The Windows-Access E-Mail forum is guaranteed malware, spyware, Trojan, >> virus and worm-free >> >> To modify your subscription options, please visit your personalise >> subscriber options page, located at >> http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/windows-access >> >> You can find an archive of all messages posted to the Windows-Access forum >> at either of the following websites: >> http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/windows-access/index.html >> Or: >> <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]> >> >> you may also subscribe to this list via RSS. The feed is at: >> <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml> >> >> --------------------------------------- >> >> >> [email protected] >> >> ======================================= >> >> To post to this group, please send your message to: >> [email protected] >> The Windows-Access E-Mail forum is guaranteed malware, spyware, Trojan, >> virus and worm-free >> >> To modify your subscription options, please visit your personalise >> subscriber options page, located at >> http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/windows-access >> >> You can find an archive of all messages posted to the Windows-Access forum >> at either of the following websites: >> http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/windows-access/index.html >> Or: >> <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]> >> >> you may also subscribe to this list via RSS. The feed is at: >> <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml> >> >> --------------------------------------- >> >> >> [email protected] > > > ********** > > Dane Trethowan > Skype: grtdane12 > Phone US (213) 438-9741 > Phone Australia (03) 9005 8589 > > > > ======================================= > > To post to this group, please send your message to: > [email protected] > The Windows-Access E-Mail forum is guaranteed malware, spyware, Trojan, virus > and worm-free > > To modify your subscription options, please visit your personalise subscriber > options page, located at > http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/windows-access > > You can find an archive of all messages posted to the Windows-Access forum at > either of the following websites: > http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/windows-access/index.html > Or: > <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]> > > you may also subscribe to this list via RSS. The feed is at: > <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml> > > --------------------------------------- > > > [email protected] ======================================= To post to this group, please send your message to: [email protected] The Windows-Access E-Mail forum is guaranteed malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and worm-free To modify your subscription options, please visit your personalise subscriber options page, located at http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/windows-access You can find an archive of all messages posted to the Windows-Access forum at either of the following websites: http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/windows-access/index.html Or: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]> you may also subscribe to this list via RSS. The feed is at: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml> --------------------------------------- [email protected]
