Joe Stinton <stintonjoe@...>
Hi all I have been using I tunes with jaws for quite a time now with little problems but last night after a update to I tunes now jaws doesn’t read any thing in the area where my albums are. All I really need it do for now is to read the place where my albums are so I may remove them or put a new one in this area. So any one know is the latest version of I tunes now no longer working with jaws 18 or is this another problem that as nothing to do with jaws !! I also have windows 10 Cheers Joe
|
|
Re: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Sounds like you are getting a heavy CPU load. If it is outlook or some other program is the question. press start then type msconcfg.exe now go to the services tab now tab until you hear hide all Microsoft services and check the box. now shift tab to the list of services and see what all is running. If you don't recognize it google it and see if you need it. If you see things like iTunes adobe google or things like that try unchecking them then click OK. Next open task manager with the ctrl + shift + esc keys. ctrl + tab to the startup tab. now do the same thing as you did in services. Now after you disable all the junk that really doesn't need to load every time you start your computer it should run much faster. Dont worry if anything you do stops a program from working you can just re-enable it the same way. If you cant find the startup tab you may have to click the more details button to make it show up.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 4/20/2019 2:55 PM, Rahul Bajaj wrote: Hi all,
I use JAWS 2018, Windows 10, Outlook 16. JAWS behaves very sluggishly in Outlook when crafting messages. I have uninstalled and reinstalled Outlook, and that has not fixed the issue. I currently write my emails in Notepad and then copy-paste them which is inconvenient.
Can anyone think of other workarounds? I know that this problem does not come up for most, but I would nonetheless like to know what you would do in case you were facing this issue. Thank you so much.
Best, Rahul
|
|
Re: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Is the hardware acceleration option unchecked?
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Rahul Bajaj Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 4:37 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook Dan, I think plain text, but I am not sure. Could that make a difference? Also, my laptop emits some air from the vents on the side - more than usual - when it becomes sluggish like this. On Apr 21, 2019, at 12:06 AM, Dan Longmore <danlongmore44@gmail.com> wrote: Hi, This is a tough one. Are you using plain text or HTML to respond? I
cannot think of any Outlook options that may cause this behavior when typing. Could it be a JAWS setting? Sorry, not much help I know. Dan
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Rahul Bajaj Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 5:55 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Hi all,
I use JAWS 2018, Windows 10, Outlook 16. JAWS behaves very sluggishly in
Outlook when crafting messages. I have uninstalled and reinstalled Outlook, and that has not fixed the issue. I currently write my emails in Notepad and then copy-paste them which is inconvenient. Can anyone think of other workarounds? I know that this problem does not
come up for most, but I would nonetheless like to know what you would do in case you were facing this issue. Thank you so much. Best, Rahul
-- -- Rahul Bajaj Candidate for the BCL Rhodes Scholar (India and Linacre 2018) University of Oxford
|
|
Re: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Dan, I think plain text, but I am not sure. Could that make a difference? Also, my laptop emits some air from the vents on the side - more than usual - when it becomes sluggish like this.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On Apr 21, 2019, at 12:06 AM, Dan Longmore <danlongmore44@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi, This is a tough one. Are you using plain text or HTML to respond? I cannot think of any Outlook options that may cause this behavior when typing. Could it be a JAWS setting? Sorry, not much help I know.
Dan
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Rahul Bajaj Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 5:55 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Hi all,
I use JAWS 2018, Windows 10, Outlook 16. JAWS behaves very sluggishly in Outlook when crafting messages. I have uninstalled and reinstalled Outlook, and that has not fixed the issue. I currently write my emails in Notepad and then copy-paste them which is inconvenient.
Can anyone think of other workarounds? I know that this problem does not come up for most, but I would nonetheless like to know what you would do in case you were facing this issue. Thank you so much.
Best, Rahul
-- -- Rahul Bajaj Candidate for the BCL Rhodes Scholar (India and Linacre 2018) University of Oxford
|
|
Re: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Hi, This is a tough one. Are you using plain text or HTML to respond? I cannot think of any Outlook options that may cause this behavior when typing. Could it be a JAWS setting? Sorry, not much help I know.
Dan
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Rahul Bajaj Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 5:55 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Hi all,
I use JAWS 2018, Windows 10, Outlook 16. JAWS behaves very sluggishly in Outlook when crafting messages. I have uninstalled and reinstalled Outlook, and that has not fixed the issue. I currently write my emails in Notepad and then copy-paste them which is inconvenient.
Can anyone think of other workarounds? I know that this problem does not come up for most, but I would nonetheless like to know what you would do in case you were facing this issue. Thank you so much.
Best, Rahul
-- -- Rahul Bajaj Candidate for the BCL Rhodes Scholar (India and Linacre 2018) University of Oxford
|
|
JAWS Becomes Sluggish When Writing Emails in Outlook
Hi all,
I use JAWS 2018, Windows 10, Outlook 16. JAWS behaves very sluggishly in Outlook when crafting messages. I have uninstalled and reinstalled Outlook, and that has not fixed the issue. I currently write my emails in Notepad and then copy-paste them which is inconvenient.
Can anyone think of other workarounds? I know that this problem does not come up for most, but I would nonetheless like to know what you would do in case you were facing this issue. Thank you so much.
Best, Rahul
-- -- Rahul Bajaj Candidate for the BCL Rhodes Scholar (India and Linacre 2018) University of Oxford
|
|
Hi, Dan here from Pennsylvania. Nice to see that you are aboard and the list has a growing world connection. Dan
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of shankar.c@... Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 10:06 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: new member. Hello all, greetings. This is Shankar, from india. Thanks to moderator for approving my subscription.
|
|
Re: JAWS WITH AN EXTERNAL SOUND CARD
#advisory
There are all kinds of low cost USB sound cards and low priced computer speakers you can connect to them.
May I make a suggestion for something even easier?
I have a Logitech s-150 digital stereo speaker. It is powered from the USB port and also shows up as a sound device. It costs about $25. It's available on Amazon.
The quality for music is not good so I use it just for screen readers like Jaws.
I have another sound card for music. Luckily, the one on my motherboard sounds good enough for music playback through powered studio monitors on my desk.
I set the onboard sound as default. Then I set the Logitech s-150 as output for each screen reader.
This works welt most of the time but occasionally screen readers or Windows gets confused and sends the voice to the main card.
I have a couple of tricks to fix that.
One is disconnect then reconnect the USB speaker.
The other is to restart the screen reader.
Hope this helps.
Bob
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 2019-04-19 7:32 p.m., Marty Hutchings wrote: I am about to install JAWS on an Aser laptop with Windows 10 and I want to be able to run a media program like Winamp and not have JAWS speak through the same speakers. Can I add an external USB sound card that I can plug speakers into for the music media and have JAWS speak through headphones plugged into the laptop's built in jack? I currently have a Windows 7 desktop with a Sound Blaster card that I play music through while JAWS speaks through the mother board sound jack.
|
|
Welcome Shankar.
Love in
Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against
the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness,
against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist
in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12,
13
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 9:05 AM
Subject: new member.
Hello all, greetings.
This is Shankar, from india.
Thanks to moderator for approving my
subscription.
|
|
Both sets of arrows work for me.
Love in
Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against
the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness,
against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist
in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12,
13
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 10:51 AM
Subject: Re: Winamp volume
are you useing the numpad? That is what is called for
in the article I linked. I dont have winamp so I cant test it. On 4/20/2019
2:06 AM, Tom wrote:
Thanks
to those who answered my query regarding how to increase the volume in Winamp.
Unfortunately
pressing the up or down arrow while playing an mp3 file does not change the
volume level at all. It seems to
be stuck at the one low fairly dull level.
Any
suggestions what I can try next?
Thanks
Tom
From
the following: keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad
2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Introduction
On the face of it, Winamp from
Nullsoft may not seem like a terribly accessible programme. Although the
interface from the keyboard is somewhat unorthodox, you’ll find that Winamp is
in fact one of the most accessible of the fully featured MP3 players. This
article seeks to help you understand what Winamp can do, how to configure it,
and all the keyboard secrets will be revealed.
You can get a brief keyboard
summary of all of the keyboard commands mentioned in this document, and a few
I won’t be covering, by pressing F1 from the Winamp main window. From there,
you can press Control+Tab through the multipage dialogue box until you get to
the tips and tricks section. If you left click your mouse on any of the text
of the edit box, this will give that read-only edit box focus, which means
that you can then read the summary with your screenreader’s continuous reading
feature. You can also go to the top of this edit box with the Control+home
combination, press Control+Shift+end to select the entire edit box (Control+A
doesn’t seem to work) and then press Control+C to copy it to the clipboard.
You may then want to paste this into a word processor or text editor and save
it for future reference.
Winamp is a fully featured
audio player, supporting most common file formats. If a file format isn’t
supported out of the box, chances are you can get a plug-in that will do the
job.
It has a playlist editor
allowing you to import individual files, entire directories and locations from
the Internet. Files can then be randomised, or sorted by a number of criteria
including song name and file name.
A graphical equaliser allows
you to make major adjustments to the sound of the player. You can choose from
presets, save your own settings, and even specify your own settings on a song
by song basis. The ID3 editor allows you to edit MP3 tag information, which is
a handy way of recording information such as the album, the artist, the year
the song was released and more.
The plug-in architecture of
Winamp means that fantastic add-ins are being released regularly, ranging from
the support of many file formats through to pitch changers and audio
compressors.
Up
Basic
Winamp Operation
When you install Winamp, you
are asked if you want it to be your default audio player. If you answer yes to
this question, Winamp will be launched from Windows Explorer or Internet
Explorer when a file that Winamp supports is encountered. The file will start
playing automatically.
You can also launch Winamp by
going to the Start menu, choosing programmes, then
Winamp.
When in Winamp, the following
commands can be used for playback. Note that some of the keypad commands
listed here may conflict with your screenreader. You will need to change your
screenreader’s key settings or use its bypass key if you wish to use the
keypad in Winamp.
- X
or Keypad 5 will play the current file. If Winamp is paused, this command
will resume playing from where you paused. If no file is loaded into Winamp,
you’ll be prompted for a file name.
- The
V key stops playing. If you hold down the Shift key, Winamp fades out the
currently playing song and then stops.
- B
or keypad 6 skips to the next track. You can do this either when Winamp is
playing or when it is stopped. If you are playing a file when you press this
key, the next song in the queue will start playing immediately. If you press
the key when Winamp is stopped, the song you have now selected will show in
the window title with the word “stopped” beside it.
- Z
or Keypad 4 skips back to the previous track. The same rules apply as for
next track discussed above.
- Keypad
1 will jump ten songs back in the playlist.
- Keypad
3 jumps ten songs forward.
- Left-arrow
or keypad 7 rewinds by 5 seconds.
- Right-arrow
or keypad 9 fastforwards by 5 seconds.
- L
or keypad 0 brings up the open file dialogue. Here, you can specify the name
of a file provided Winamp supports the file format. You can also specify a
playlist with a .m3u or .pls extension.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 lets you specify a file on the Internet. You will need
the full URL of the file or playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key lets you specify a directory to play. All files in that
directory with file formats that Winamp supports will be
played.
- Keypad
8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad
2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Up
Configuring
Winamp
Winamp is highly configurable.
This section seeks to help you understand how to navigate Winamp’s
Preferences.
To enter the preferences, press
Control+P. Winamp will present you with a treeview. As in any treeview, you
use the right-arrow key to eXPand a branch of the tree, the left-arrow to
close a branch, and the down-arrow to navigate through items in the tree. Once
you’ve selected a section, you can use the tab and Shift+Tab keys to navigate
through the various elements.
When you get to the section for
selecting and configuring plug-ins, it is important to understand that after
you have selected the plug-in with the arrow keys, there is often a configure
button which allows you to fine-tune the settings for that particular plug-in.
Normally, you need to press the tab key to find the configure button. Pressing
the space bar will bring up the configuration dialogue box for that
plug-in.
Up
The
Playlist Editor
The Playlist Editor is one of
Winamp’s less accessible features, but there is more that you can do with the
keyboard than many people think. The major difficulty is that with most
screenreaders, using the arrow keys in Winamp 2.x will not give you reliable
information about the song that you’ve selected. I have heard that some
Windoweyes users have got it to work to some degree thanks to some clever set
file manipulation, but I never have.
Anyway, let’s take a look at
what you can do with the keyboard. Firstly, you will want to get into the
Playlist Editor. If the Playlist Editor window isn’t open yet, you will need
to open it by pressing Control+E. Incidentally, once Windows such as the
Playlist Editor are open, you can cycle through all open Windows with the
Control+Tab combination.
- The
R key toggles the repeat function. I have always had difficulty determining
the status of the repeat function from the Playlist Editor window itself,
but you can also toggle the repeat function from the main Winamp Menu, which
can be accessed from the main Winamp window with Alt+F, and then choosing
playback options. Here, your screenreader should have no trouble telling you
whether repeat is checked or not.
- The
S key toggles whether shuffle is on or off. The same applies here as for the
repeat function.
- L
or keypad 0 adds a file to the playlist.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 adds an Internet location to the
playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key adds a directory to the playlist.
- Control+N
clears the playlist and lets you start from scratch.
- Control+O
lets you open a playlist you might previously have saved to
disk.
- Control+S
saves the playlist you’ve been working on. You have a number of formats from
which you can choose once you open the save dialogue. .m3u is probably the
best in most cases, because the playlist is saved as a standard text file
with one file per line. This makes it easy to edit your playlist with a text
editor given that Winamp’s editing features are not screenreader
friendly.
- Alt+3
views the track information for the selected track or
tracks.
- Control+E
lets you edit the names of the selected track or tracks, but keep in mind
that with screenreaders, it’s quite difficult to determine exactly what is
selected.
- Control+A
selects the entire playlist.
- Control+I
inverts the selection, in other words what was selected becomes unselected
and vice versa.
- The
delete key removes selected files from the playlist.
- Control+delete
crops the playlist.
- Control+Shift+delete
clears the playlist.
- Alt+down-arrow
moves selected files down.
- Alt+up-arrow
moves selected files up.
- The
down and up-arrow keys move the cursor down and up respectively, but as has
been discussed, you are unlikely to get reliable feedback from your
screenreader because of the custom window type Winamp is
using.
- The
ENTER key plays the selected file.
- The
home and end keys jump to the start and end of the playlist
respectively.
- Page
up and page down move up and down by a fifth of a page.
- Alt+delete
removes all non-existent files from a playlist.
- Control+Shift+1
sorts the playlist by title.
- Control+Shift+2
sorts the playlist by file name.
- Control+Shift+3
sorts the playlist by file path and name.
- Control+R
reverses the order of the playlist.
- Control+Shift+R
randomises the playlist.
Also, all playback Controls are
available as they are in the main window.
Up
Graphical
Equaliser
Although I have not heard of
anyone being able to set up their screenreader to tell them the percentage of
each band of the equaliser in Winamp 2.x, you can make changes via the
keyboard and listen to the results to see how you like it. Also, Control+s
brings up a list of over 20 presets that you can choose
from.
First though, you will need to
open the graphical equaliser if it is not open already. You can do this with
the Alt+G combination.
- The
1 and 0 keys increase their respective band of the ten band equaliser. 1 is
the lowest band IE base, 0 is the highest band, IE treble. The row
underneath decreases each band, from the q to the P keys. So 1 and Q turns
the lowest band up and down respectively, 0 and P turns the highest band up
and down respectively.
- Similarly,
the tilde and tab keys turn the pre-amp up and down
respectively.
- The
N key toggles the equaliser on and off, so if it doesn’t sound like what you
are doing with the number and qwerty rows is having any effect, try pressing
the N key to turn the equaliser on.
- S
opens the presets menu.
The A key toggles auto-loading
of the equaliser.
Up
Conclusion
I hope that this gets you
started. Feel free to drop me a note with any questions, ask on the PC-Audio
list, and visit the Winamp Documentation.
[/responsivevoice]
Laatst
bijgewerkt op: 3/05/14
Primaire
Sidebar
<div
class="statcounter"><a title="WordPress hit counter" href="https://statcounter.com/wordpress.org/"
class="statcounter"><img class="statcounter"
src="//c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/1/" alt="WordPress hit counter"
/></a></div>
<div
class="statcounter"><a title="web analytics" href="https://statcounter.com/"><img
class="statcounter" src="https://c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/0/"
alt="web analytics" /></a></div>
Original
text
Contribute
a better translation
<!--[if
!supportLineBreakNewLine]--> <!--[endif]-->
On
4/19/2019 7:08 PM, Tom wrote:
Hi,
How can I increase the volume in Winamp?
Thanks
Tom
|
|
Yes, that works too. I didn’t mean to say that the EQ Tab was the
only way to get access to the volume control.
Love in
Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against
the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness,
against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist
in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12,
13
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 10:12 AM
Subject: Re: Winamp volume
Hi,
Marty. I respectfully disagree. I have my equalizer window inactivated so that
it does not open (ALT plus G). When I am in the main window, so that I can pause
a track with the letter C, Up and Down arrows increase and decrease
volume.
From:
main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Marty Hutchings Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 7:27
AM To:
main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re:
Winamp volume
The
Up and Down arrows only work for volume when you are in the EQ Tab. To get
there, use Control Tab twice from the Play List Editor
Tab.
Love
in Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but
against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this
darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist
in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12,
13
Sent:
Saturday, April 20, 2019 4:06 AM
Subject:
Re: Winamp volume
Thanks to
those who answered my query regarding how to increase the volume in
Winamp.
Unfortunately
pressing the up or down arrow while playing an mp3 file does not change the
volume level at all. It seems to be
stuck at the one low fairly dull level.
Any
suggestions what I can try next?
Thanks
Tom
From:
main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Randy Barnett Sent: Saturday, 20 April 2019 12:29
PM To:
main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re:
Winamp volume
From
the following: keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad
2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Introduction
On the face of it, Winamp from
Nullsoft may not seem like a terribly accessible programme. Although the
interface from the keyboard is somewhat unorthodox, you’ll find that Winamp is
in fact one of the most accessible of the fully featured MP3 players. This
article seeks to help you understand what Winamp can do, how to configure it,
and all the keyboard secrets will be revealed.
You can get a brief keyboard
summary of all of the keyboard commands mentioned in this document, and a few I
won’t be covering, by pressing F1 from the Winamp main window. From there, you
can press Control+Tab through the multipage dialogue box until you get to the
tips and tricks section. If you left click your mouse on any of the text of the
edit box, this will give that read-only edit box focus, which means that you can
then read the summary with your screenreader’s continuous reading feature. You
can also go to the top of this edit box with the Control+home combination, press
Control+Shift+end to select the entire edit box (Control+A doesn’t seem to work)
and then press Control+C to copy it to the clipboard. You may then want to paste
this into a word processor or text editor and save it for future
reference.
Winamp is a fully featured audio
player, supporting most common file formats. If a file format isn’t supported
out of the box, chances are you can get a plug-in that will do the
job.
It has a playlist editor allowing
you to import individual files, entire directories and locations from the
Internet. Files can then be randomised, or sorted by a number of criteria
including song name and file name.
A graphical equaliser allows you
to make major adjustments to the sound of the player. You can choose from
presets, save your own settings, and even specify your own settings on a song by
song basis. The ID3 editor allows you to edit MP3 tag information, which is a
handy way of recording information such as the album, the artist, the year the
song was released and more.
The plug-in architecture of
Winamp means that fantastic add-ins are being released regularly, ranging from
the support of many file formats through to pitch changers and audio
compressors.
Up
Basic
Winamp Operation
When you install Winamp, you are
asked if you want it to be your default audio player. If you answer yes to this
question, Winamp will be launched from Windows Explorer or Internet Explorer
when a file that Winamp supports is encountered. The file will start playing
automatically.
You can also launch Winamp by
going to the Start menu, choosing programmes, then
Winamp.
When in Winamp, the following
commands can be used for playback. Note that some of the keypad commands listed
here may conflict with your screenreader. You will need to change your
screenreader’s key settings or use its bypass key if you wish to use the keypad
in Winamp.
- X
or Keypad 5 will play the current file. If Winamp is paused, this command will
resume playing from where you paused. If no file is loaded into Winamp, you’ll
be prompted for a file name.
- The
V key stops playing. If you hold down the Shift key, Winamp fades out the
currently playing song and then stops.
- B
or keypad 6 skips to the next track. You can do this either when Winamp is
playing or when it is stopped. If you are playing a file when you press this
key, the next song in the queue will start playing immediately. If you press
the key when Winamp is stopped, the song you have now selected will show in
the window title with the word “stopped” beside it.
- Z
or Keypad 4 skips back to the previous track. The same rules apply as for next
track discussed above.
- Keypad
1 will jump ten songs back in the playlist.
- Keypad
3 jumps ten songs forward.
- Left-arrow
or keypad 7 rewinds by 5 seconds.
- Right-arrow
or keypad 9 fastforwards by 5 seconds.
- L
or keypad 0 brings up the open file dialogue. Here, you can specify the name
of a file provided Winamp supports the file format. You can also specify a
playlist with a .m3u or .pls extension.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 lets you specify a file on the Internet. You will need the
full URL of the file or playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key lets you specify a directory to play. All files in that
directory with file formats that Winamp supports will be
played.
- Keypad
8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad
2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Up
Configuring
Winamp
Winamp is highly configurable.
This section seeks to help you understand how to navigate Winamp’s
Preferences.
To enter the preferences, press
Control+P. Winamp will present you with a treeview. As in any treeview, you use
the right-arrow key to eXPand a branch of the tree, the left-arrow to close a
branch, and the down-arrow to navigate through items in the tree. Once you’ve
selected a section, you can use the tab and Shift+Tab keys to navigate through
the various elements.
When you get to the section for
selecting and configuring plug-ins, it is important to understand that after you
have selected the plug-in with the arrow keys, there is often a configure button
which allows you to fine-tune the settings for that particular plug-in.
Normally, you need to press the tab key to find the configure button. Pressing
the space bar will bring up the configuration dialogue box for that
plug-in.
Up
The
Playlist Editor
The Playlist Editor is one of
Winamp’s less accessible features, but there is more that you can do with the
keyboard than many people think. The major difficulty is that with most
screenreaders, using the arrow keys in Winamp 2.x will not give you reliable
information about the song that you’ve selected. I have heard that some
Windoweyes users have got it to work to some degree thanks to some clever set
file manipulation, but I never have.
Anyway, let’s take a look at what
you can do with the keyboard. Firstly, you will want to get into the Playlist
Editor. If the Playlist Editor window isn’t open yet, you will need to open it
by pressing Control+E. Incidentally, once Windows such as the Playlist Editor
are open, you can cycle through all open Windows with the Control+Tab
combination.
- The
R key toggles the repeat function. I have always had difficulty determining
the status of the repeat function from the Playlist Editor window itself, but
you can also toggle the repeat function from the main Winamp Menu, which can
be accessed from the main Winamp window with Alt+F, and then choosing playback
options. Here, your screenreader should have no trouble telling you whether
repeat is checked or not.
- The
S key toggles whether shuffle is on or off. The same applies here as for the
repeat function.
- L
or keypad 0 adds a file to the playlist.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 adds an Internet location to the
playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key adds a directory to the playlist.
- Control+N
clears the playlist and lets you start from scratch.
- Control+O
lets you open a playlist you might previously have saved to
disk.
- Control+S
saves the playlist you’ve been working on. You have a number of formats from
which you can choose once you open the save dialogue. .m3u is probably the
best in most cases, because the playlist is saved as a standard text file with
one file per line. This makes it easy to edit your playlist with a text editor
given that Winamp’s editing features are not screenreader
friendly.
- Alt+3
views the track information for the selected track or
tracks.
- Control+E
lets you edit the names of the selected track or tracks, but keep in mind that
with screenreaders, it’s quite difficult to determine exactly what is
selected.
- Control+A
selects the entire playlist.
- Control+I
inverts the selection, in other words what was selected becomes unselected and
vice versa.
- The
delete key removes selected files from the playlist.
- Control+delete
crops the playlist.
- Control+Shift+delete
clears the playlist.
- Alt+down-arrow
moves selected files down.
- Alt+up-arrow
moves selected files up.
- The
down and up-arrow keys move the cursor down and up respectively, but as has
been discussed, you are unlikely to get reliable feedback from your
screenreader because of the custom window type Winamp is
using.
- The
ENTER key plays the selected file.
- The
home and end keys jump to the start and end of the playlist
respectively.
- Page
up and page down move up and down by a fifth of a page.
- Alt+delete
removes all non-existent files from a playlist.
- Control+Shift+1
sorts the playlist by title.
- Control+Shift+2
sorts the playlist by file name.
- Control+Shift+3
sorts the playlist by file path and name.
- Control+R
reverses the order of the playlist.
- Control+Shift+R
randomises the playlist.
Also, all playback Controls are
available as they are in the main window.
Up
Graphical
Equaliser
Although I have not heard of
anyone being able to set up their screenreader to tell them the percentage of
each band of the equaliser in Winamp 2.x, you can make changes via the keyboard
and listen to the results to see how you like it. Also, Control+s brings up a
list of over 20 presets that you can choose from.
First though, you will need to
open the graphical equaliser if it is not open already. You can do this with the
Alt+G combination.
- The
1 and 0 keys increase their respective band of the ten band equaliser. 1 is
the lowest band IE base, 0 is the highest band, IE treble. The row underneath
decreases each band, from the q to the P keys. So 1 and Q turns the lowest
band up and down respectively, 0 and P turns the highest band up and down
respectively.
- Similarly,
the tilde and tab keys turn the pre-amp up and down
respectively.
- The
N key toggles the equaliser on and off, so if it doesn’t sound like what you
are doing with the number and qwerty rows is having any effect, try pressing
the N key to turn the equaliser on.
- S
opens the presets menu.
The A key toggles auto-loading of
the equaliser.
Up
Conclusion
I hope that this gets you
started. Feel free to drop me a note with any questions, ask on the PC-Audio
list, and visit the Winamp Documentation.
[/responsivevoice]
Laatst
bijgewerkt op: 3/05/14
Primaire
Sidebar
<div
class="statcounter"><a title="WordPress hit counter" href="https://statcounter.com/wordpress.org/"
class="statcounter"><img class="statcounter"
src="//c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/1/" alt="WordPress hit counter"
/></a></div>
<div
class="statcounter"><a title="web analytics" href="https://statcounter.com/"><img
class="statcounter" src="https://c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/0/"
alt="web analytics" /></a></div>
Original
text
Contribute
a better translation
On
4/19/2019 7:08 PM, Tom wrote:
Hi,
How can I increase the
volume in Winamp?
Thanks
Tom
|
|
Welcome Shankar.� Hope you enjoy the list
Stewart
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 4/20/2019 10:05 AM, shankar.c@tech-accessibility.in wrote: Hello all, greetings.
This is Shankar, from india.
Thanks to moderator for approving my subscription.
|
|
Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Hello Bill:
A person does not need to restart the computer.
Once they have followed you instructions, all they need do is unload and restart JAWS.
Sincerely:
Dave Durber
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message ----- From: "Bill White" <billwhite92701@dslextreme.com> To: <main@jfw.groups.io> Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2019 4:41 PM Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4 Hi, Marty. Yes, it can be changed without reinstalling JAWS. 1. Just press JAWS key plus J. 2. Press the ALT key. 3. If it says JAWS Options, press ENTER. 4. If it then says Basics, press ENTER again. 5. TAB five times, and make sure Run JAWS from System Tray is checked, by using the Space Bar. 6. TAB another five times, and press Space Bar on the OK button. 7. Now restart the computer. When JAWS comes up, it will now be running in the system tray.
Bill White
billwhite92701@dslextreme.com
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Marty Hutchings Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2019 8:18 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Can this be changed without reinstalling JAWS?
Love in Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places. Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist
in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12, 13 -----Original Message----- From: Dave... Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2019 9:19 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
James -- system tray.
Dave Oregonite, woodworker, Engineer, Musician, and Pioneer
----- Original Message ----- From: "James Bentley" <bentleyj1952@att.net> To: <main@jfw.groups.io> Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2019 00:34 Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
I hate Jaws in the task bar too. And, I'm still curious as to where Jaws runs best.
James B
-----Original Message----- From: Sieghard Weitzel Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2019 12:29 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
If this is the case I wonder why "Run from system tray" is not checked by default if you install Jaws on a new system. It is always one of the first things I do either manually or in the setup wizard since I hate having Jaws in the taskbar.
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of James Bentley Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2019 6:01 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Greetings,
Now, you got me curious. FS use to always tell users of Jaws that they will have a better experience if they run Jaws from the system tray. What kind of problems do you run in to if it is run from the system tray.
Naturally, we all want Jaws to be as effective and problem free as possible. So, Any advice will be appreciated.
Cheers,
James B
-----Original Message----- From: Dan Longmore Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2019 5:21 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Hi, JAWS in the system tray does not always respond well. Best practice in my thought is to quit JAWS with JAWS key and F4.
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of James Bentley Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2019 9:11 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Are you not running Jaws from the system tray? If doing an insert/jaws key plus J doesn't put you in to the Jaws options, that is telling you that all you need to do is put Jaws in to the system tray. Then, insert/Jaws F4 will work the way you want it to.
If you can alt tab to the Jaws options menu, then go in to basics and tab to run Jaws in the system tray and check that check box.
Good luck,
James B
-----Original Message----- From: Rick Mladek Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2019 6:07 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Hi,
I am using latest 2019 JAWS and Windows 10. Working for me... surely must be a setting. Has all been accomplished with obtaining authorization? I am not sure if this works with laptop setting Vs desktop.
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of surendra KUMAR GUPTA Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2019 6:32 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Yes, I have already tested this one and it works as expected. I just wanted Insert+F4 command to somehow work, but no success so far.
On 4/17/19, Rick Mladek <hmladek@neo.rr.com> wrote:
Hi Surendra,
When you alt tab to the JAWS screen/application, try alt F4 and see if you get the shut down command.
-----Original Message----- From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of surendra KUMAR GUPTA Sent: Wednesday, April 17, 2019 5:00 AM To: jfw@groups.io Subject: Unable to quit JAWS using Insert+F4
Hi all,
I hope this Email finds you all in good spirit.
My friend has recently purchased a laptop equipped with Windows10. Since he is not that tech savvy, he wanted me to install his prefered apps and do all the necessary settings according to his liking. I installed JAWS and NVDA successfully; however, I was unable to perform the Insert+F4 command to quit JAWS by any means, even when setting keyboard layout to laptop. As I hit Caps lock+F4, JAWS speaks "Windows+P" and opens a projection listbox with 4 options like, "Computer only," "Extend" etc. I tried the same via an external USB keyboard, but to no avail. Besides, Application key for bringing up a context menu is non-functional, I can easily launch the same with Shift+F10 though. Now, it really makes me wonder why such a strange is happening. Your tips and tricks will be highly appreciated.
-- Regards, Surendra Kumar Gupta Accessibility Testing Engineer, QA InfoTech, http://www.qainfotech.com - An Independent Software Testing and Quality Assurance Company Skype Id: surendrathegreat24
-- Regards, Surendra Kumar Gupta Accessibility Testing Trainee, QA InfoTech, http://www.qainfotech.com - An Independent Software Testing and Quality Assurance Company 100 Best Companies to work for in 2010 and 2011 & 50 Best Companies to work for in 2012 Skype Id: surendrathegreat24 M: 91-8010648093
QA InfoTech is an ISO 9001:2008, CMMi Level 3, ISO 20000-1:2011 and ISO 27001:2005 Compliant Company
|
|
Hello all, greetings. This is Shankar, from india. Thanks to moderator for approving my subscription.
|
|
are you useing the numpad? That is what
is called for in the article I linked. I dont have winamp so I
cant test it.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 4/20/2019 2:06 AM, Tom wrote:
Thanks to those who answered
my query regarding how to increase the volume in Winamp.
Unfortunately pressing the up
or down arrow while playing an mp3 file does not change the
volume level at all. It
seems to be stuck at the one low fairly dull level.
Any suggestions what I can
try next?
Thanks
Tom
From the following:
keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad 2 or down-arrow turns the
volume down.
Introduction
On
the face of it, Winamp from Nullsoft may not
seem like a terribly accessible programme.
Although the interface from the keyboard is
somewhat unorthodox, you’ll find that Winamp is
in fact one of the most accessible of the fully
featured MP3 players. This article seeks to help
you understand what Winamp can do, how to
configure it, and all the keyboard secrets will
be revealed.
You
can get a brief keyboard summary of all of the
keyboard commands mentioned in this document,
and a few I won’t be covering, by pressing F1
from the Winamp main window. From there, you can
press Control+Tab through the multipage dialogue
box until you get to the tips and tricks
section. If you left click your mouse on any of
the text of the edit box, this will give that
read-only edit box focus, which means that you
can then read the summary with your
screenreader’s continuous reading feature. You
can also go to the top of this edit box with the
Control+home combination, press
Control+Shift+end to select the entire edit box
(Control+A doesn’t seem to work) and then press
Control+C to copy it to the clipboard. You may
then want to paste this into a word processor or
text editor and save it for future reference.
Winamp
is a fully featured audio player, supporting
most common file formats. If a file format isn’t
supported out of the box, chances are you can
get a plug-in that will do the job.
It
has a playlist editor allowing you to import
individual files, entire directories and
locations from the Internet. Files can then be
randomised, or sorted by a number of criteria
including song name and file name.
A
graphical equaliser allows you to make major
adjustments to the sound of the player. You can
choose from presets, save your own settings, and
even specify your own settings on a song by song
basis. The ID3 editor allows you to edit MP3 tag
information, which is a handy way of recording
information such as the album, the artist, the
year the song was released and more.
The
plug-in architecture of Winamp means that
fantastic add-ins are being released regularly,
ranging from the support of many file formats
through to pitch changers and audio compressors.
Up
Basic
Winamp Operation
When
you install Winamp, you are asked if you want it
to be your default audio player. If you answer
yes to this question, Winamp will be launched
from Windows Explorer or Internet Explorer when
a file that Winamp supports is encountered. The
file will start playing automatically.
You
can also launch Winamp by going to the Start
menu, choosing programmes, then Winamp.
When
in Winamp, the following commands can be used
for playback. Note that some of the keypad
commands listed here may conflict with your
screenreader. You will need to change your
screenreader’s key settings or use its bypass
key if you wish to use the keypad in Winamp.
- X
or Keypad 5 will play the current file. If
Winamp is paused, this command will resume
playing from where you paused. If no file is
loaded into Winamp, you’ll be prompted for a
file name.
- The
V key stops playing. If you hold down the
Shift key, Winamp fades out the currently
playing song and then stops.
- B
or keypad 6 skips to the next track. You can
do this either when Winamp is playing or when
it is stopped. If you are playing a file when
you press this key, the next song in the queue
will start playing immediately. If you press
the key when Winamp is stopped, the song you
have now selected will show in the window
title with the word “stopped” beside it.
- Z
or Keypad 4 skips back to the previous track.
The same rules apply as for next track
discussed above.
- Keypad
1 will jump ten songs back in the playlist.
- Keypad
3 jumps ten songs forward.
- Left-arrow
or keypad 7 rewinds by 5 seconds.
- Right-arrow
or keypad 9 fastforwards by 5 seconds.
- L
or keypad 0 brings up the open file dialogue.
Here, you can specify the name of a file
provided Winamp supports the file format. You
can also specify a playlist with a .m3u or
.pls extension.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 lets you specify a file on
the Internet. You will need the full URL of
the file or playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key lets you specify a directory
to play. All files in that directory with file
formats that Winamp supports will be played.
- Keypad
8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad
2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Up
Configuring
Winamp
Winamp
is highly configurable. This section seeks to
help you understand how to navigate Winamp’s
Preferences.
To
enter the preferences, press Control+P. Winamp
will present you with a treeview. As in any
treeview, you use the right-arrow key to eXPand
a branch of the tree, the left-arrow to close a
branch, and the down-arrow to navigate through
items in the tree. Once you’ve selected a
section, you can use the tab and Shift+Tab keys
to navigate through the various elements.
When
you get to the section for selecting and
configuring plug-ins, it is important to
understand that after you have selected the
plug-in with the arrow keys, there is often a
configure button which allows you to fine-tune
the settings for that particular plug-in.
Normally, you need to press the tab key to find
the configure button. Pressing the space bar
will bring up the configuration dialogue box for
that plug-in.
Up
The
Playlist Editor
The
Playlist Editor is one of Winamp’s less
accessible features, but there is more that you
can do with the keyboard than many people think.
The major difficulty is that with most
screenreaders, using the arrow keys in Winamp
2.x will not give you reliable information about
the song that you’ve selected. I have heard that
some Windoweyes users have got it to work to
some degree thanks to some clever set file
manipulation, but I never have.
Anyway,
let’s take a look at what you can do with the
keyboard. Firstly, you will want to get into the
Playlist Editor. If the Playlist Editor window
isn’t open yet, you will need to open it by
pressing Control+E. Incidentally, once Windows
such as the Playlist Editor are open, you can
cycle through all open Windows with the
Control+Tab combination.
- The
R key toggles the repeat function. I have
always had difficulty determining the status
of the repeat function from the Playlist
Editor window itself, but you can also toggle
the repeat function from the main Winamp Menu,
which can be accessed from the main Winamp
window with Alt+F, and then choosing playback
options. Here, your screenreader should have
no trouble telling you whether repeat is
checked or not.
- The
S key toggles whether shuffle is on or off.
The same applies here as for the repeat
function.
- L
or keypad 0 adds a file to the playlist.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 adds an Internet location
to the playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key adds a directory to the
playlist.
- Control+N
clears the playlist and lets you start from
scratch.
- Control+O
lets you open a playlist you might previously
have saved to disk.
- Control+S
saves the playlist you’ve been working on. You
have a number of formats from which you can
choose once you open the save dialogue. .m3u
is probably the best in most cases, because
the playlist is saved as a standard text file
with one file per line. This makes it easy to
edit your playlist with a text editor given
that Winamp’s editing features are not
screenreader friendly.
- Alt+3
views the track information for the selected
track or tracks.
- Control+E
lets you edit the names of the selected track
or tracks, but keep in mind that with
screenreaders, it’s quite difficult to
determine exactly what is selected.
- Control+A
selects the entire playlist.
- Control+I
inverts the selection, in other words what was
selected becomes unselected and vice versa.
- The
delete key removes selected files from the
playlist.
- Control+delete
crops the playlist.
- Control+Shift+delete
clears the playlist.
- Alt+down-arrow
moves selected files down.
- Alt+up-arrow
moves selected files up.
- The
down and up-arrow keys move the cursor down
and up respectively, but as has been
discussed, you are unlikely to get reliable
feedback from your screenreader because of the
custom window type Winamp is using.
- The
ENTER key plays the selected file.
- The
home and end keys jump to the start and end of
the playlist respectively.
- Page
up and page down move up and down by a fifth
of a page.
- Alt+delete
removes all non-existent files from a
playlist.
- Control+Shift+1
sorts the playlist by title.
- Control+Shift+2
sorts the playlist by file name.
- Control+Shift+3
sorts the playlist by file path and name.
- Control+R
reverses the order of the playlist.
- Control+Shift+R
randomises the playlist.
Also,
all playback Controls are available as they are
in the main window.
Up
Graphical
Equaliser
Although
I have not heard of anyone being able to set up
their screenreader to tell them the percentage
of each band of the equaliser in Winamp 2.x, you
can make changes via the keyboard and listen to
the results to see how you like it. Also,
Control+s brings up a list of over 20 presets
that you can choose from.
First
though, you will need to open the graphical
equaliser if it is not open already. You can do
this with the Alt+G combination.
- The
1 and 0 keys increase their respective band of
the ten band equaliser. 1 is the lowest band
IE base, 0 is the highest band, IE treble. The
row underneath decreases each band, from the q
to the P keys. So 1 and Q turns the lowest
band up and down respectively, 0 and P turns
the highest band up and down respectively.
- Similarly,
the tilde and tab keys turn the pre-amp up and
down respectively.
- The
N key toggles the equaliser on and off, so if
it doesn’t sound like what you are doing with
the number and qwerty rows is having any
effect, try pressing the N key to turn the
equaliser on.
- S
opens the presets menu.
The
A key toggles auto-loading of the equaliser.
Up
Conclusion
I
hope that this gets you started. Feel free to
drop me a note with any questions, ask on the
PC-Audio list, and visit the Winamp
Documentation.
[/responsivevoice]
Laatst bijgewerkt op: 3/05/14
Primaire Sidebar
<div class="statcounter"><a
title="WordPress hit counter" href="https://statcounter.com/wordpress.org/"
class="statcounter"><img class="statcounter"
src="//c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/1/"
alt="WordPress hit counter" /></a></div>
<div class="statcounter"><a
title="web analytics" href="https://statcounter.com/"><img
class="statcounter" src="https://c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/0/"
alt="web analytics" /></a></div>
Original text
Contribute a better translation
On 4/19/2019 7:08 PM, Tom wrote:
Hi,
How can I increase the volume in Winamp?
Thanks
Tom
|
|
Yeah, although the volume control does work in the eq, its’ not a function of the eq. The pre-amp gain is, and you control that with grave and tab once the eq is on. Up and down arrow for volume should work in the main window if all is right with the programme.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Bill White Sent: April 20, 2019 11:13 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Winamp volume Hi, Marty. I respectfully disagree. I have my equalizer window inactivated so that it does not open (ALT plus G). When I am in the main window, so that I can pause a track with the letter C, Up and Down arrows increase and decrease volume. From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Marty Hutchings Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 7:27 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Winamp volume The Up and Down arrows only work for volume when you are in the EQ Tab. To get there, use Control Tab twice from the Play List Editor Tab. Love in Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places. Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12, 13 Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 4:06 AM Subject: Re: Winamp volume Thanks to those who answered my query regarding how to increase the volume in Winamp. Unfortunately pressing the up or down arrow while playing an mp3 file does not change the volume level at all. It seems to be stuck at the one low fairly dull level. Any suggestions what I can try next? Thanks Tom From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Randy Barnett Sent: Saturday, 20 April 2019 12:29 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Winamp volume From the following: keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume. - Keypad 2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Introduction
On the face of it, Winamp from Nullsoft may not seem like a terribly accessible programme. Although the interface from the keyboard is somewhat unorthodox, you’ll find that Winamp is in fact one of the most accessible of the fully featured MP3 players. This article seeks to help you understand what Winamp can do, how to configure it, and all the keyboard secrets will be revealed. You can get a brief keyboard summary of all of the keyboard commands mentioned in this document, and a few I won’t be covering, by pressing F1 from the Winamp main window. From there, you can press Control+Tab through the multipage dialogue box until you get to the tips and tricks section. If you left click your mouse on any of the text of the edit box, this will give that read-only edit box focus, which means that you can then read the summary with your screenreader’s continuous reading feature. You can also go to the top of this edit box with the Control+home combination, press Control+Shift+end to select the entire edit box (Control+A doesn’t seem to work) and then press Control+C to copy it to the clipboard. You may then want to paste this into a word processor or text editor and save it for future reference. Winamp is a fully featured audio player, supporting most common file formats. If a file format isn’t supported out of the box, chances are you can get a plug-in that will do the job. It has a playlist editor allowing you to import individual files, entire directories and locations from the Internet. Files can then be randomised, or sorted by a number of criteria including song name and file name. A graphical equaliser allows you to make major adjustments to the sound of the player. You can choose from presets, save your own settings, and even specify your own settings on a song by song basis. The ID3 editor allows you to edit MP3 tag information, which is a handy way of recording information such as the album, the artist, the year the song was released and more. The plug-in architecture of Winamp means that fantastic add-ins are being released regularly, ranging from the support of many file formats through to pitch changers and audio compressors. Up Basic Winamp OperationWhen you install Winamp, you are asked if you want it to be your default audio player. If you answer yes to this question, Winamp will be launched from Windows Explorer or Internet Explorer when a file that Winamp supports is encountered. The file will start playing automatically. You can also launch Winamp by going to the Start menu, choosing programmes, then Winamp. When in Winamp, the following commands can be used for playback. Note that some of the keypad commands listed here may conflict with your screenreader. You will need to change your screenreader’s key settings or use its bypass key if you wish to use the keypad in Winamp. - X or Keypad 5 will play the current file. If Winamp is paused, this command will resume playing from where you paused. If no file is loaded into Winamp, you’ll be prompted for a file name.
- The V key stops playing. If you hold down the Shift key, Winamp fades out the currently playing song and then stops.
- B or keypad 6 skips to the next track. You can do this either when Winamp is playing or when it is stopped. If you are playing a file when you press this key, the next song in the queue will start playing immediately. If you press the key when Winamp is stopped, the song you have now selected will show in the window title with the word “stopped” beside it.
- Z or Keypad 4 skips back to the previous track. The same rules apply as for next track discussed above.
- Keypad 1 will jump ten songs back in the playlist.
- Keypad 3 jumps ten songs forward.
- Left-arrow or keypad 7 rewinds by 5 seconds.
- Right-arrow or keypad 9 fastforwards by 5 seconds.
- L or keypad 0 brings up the open file dialogue. Here, you can specify the name of a file provided Winamp supports the file format. You can also specify a playlist with a .m3u or .pls extension.
- Control+L or Control+keypad 0 lets you specify a file on the Internet. You will need the full URL of the file or playlist.
- Shift+L or the insert key lets you specify a directory to play. All files in that directory with file formats that Winamp supports will be played.
- Keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad 2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Up Configuring WinampWinamp is highly configurable. This section seeks to help you understand how to navigate Winamp’s Preferences. To enter the preferences, press Control+P. Winamp will present you with a treeview. As in any treeview, you use the right-arrow key to eXPand a branch of the tree, the left-arrow to close a branch, and the down-arrow to navigate through items in the tree. Once you’ve selected a section, you can use the tab and Shift+Tab keys to navigate through the various elements. When you get to the section for selecting and configuring plug-ins, it is important to understand that after you have selected the plug-in with the arrow keys, there is often a configure button which allows you to fine-tune the settings for that particular plug-in. Normally, you need to press the tab key to find the configure button. Pressing the space bar will bring up the configuration dialogue box for that plug-in. Up The Playlist EditorThe Playlist Editor is one of Winamp’s less accessible features, but there is more that you can do with the keyboard than many people think. The major difficulty is that with most screenreaders, using the arrow keys in Winamp 2.x will not give you reliable information about the song that you’ve selected. I have heard that some Windoweyes users have got it to work to some degree thanks to some clever set file manipulation, but I never have. Anyway, let’s take a look at what you can do with the keyboard. Firstly, you will want to get into the Playlist Editor. If the Playlist Editor window isn’t open yet, you will need to open it by pressing Control+E. Incidentally, once Windows such as the Playlist Editor are open, you can cycle through all open Windows with the Control+Tab combination. - The R key toggles the repeat function. I have always had difficulty determining the status of the repeat function from the Playlist Editor window itself, but you can also toggle the repeat function from the main Winamp Menu, which can be accessed from the main Winamp window with Alt+F, and then choosing playback options. Here, your screenreader should have no trouble telling you whether repeat is checked or not.
- The S key toggles whether shuffle is on or off. The same applies here as for the repeat function.
- L or keypad 0 adds a file to the playlist.
- Control+L or Control+keypad 0 adds an Internet location to the playlist.
- Shift+L or the insert key adds a directory to the playlist.
- Control+N clears the playlist and lets you start from scratch.
- Control+O lets you open a playlist you might previously have saved to disk.
- Control+S saves the playlist you’ve been working on. You have a number of formats from which you can choose once you open the save dialogue. .m3u is probably the best in most cases, because the playlist is saved as a standard text file with one file per line. This makes it easy to edit your playlist with a text editor given that Winamp’s editing features are not screenreader friendly.
- Alt+3 views the track information for the selected track or tracks.
- Control+E lets you edit the names of the selected track or tracks, but keep in mind that with screenreaders, it’s quite difficult to determine exactly what is selected.
- Control+A selects the entire playlist.
- Control+I inverts the selection, in other words what was selected becomes unselected and vice versa.
- The delete key removes selected files from the playlist.
- Control+delete crops the playlist.
- Control+Shift+delete clears the playlist.
- Alt+down-arrow moves selected files down.
- Alt+up-arrow moves selected files up.
- The down and up-arrow keys move the cursor down and up respectively, but as has been discussed, you are unlikely to get reliable feedback from your screenreader because of the custom window type Winamp is using.
- The ENTER key plays the selected file.
- The home and end keys jump to the start and end of the playlist respectively.
- Page up and page down move up and down by a fifth of a page.
- Alt+delete removes all non-existent files from a playlist.
- Control+Shift+1 sorts the playlist by title.
- Control+Shift+2 sorts the playlist by file name.
- Control+Shift+3 sorts the playlist by file path and name.
- Control+R reverses the order of the playlist.
- Control+Shift+R randomises the playlist.
Also, all playback Controls are available as they are in the main window. Up Graphical EqualiserAlthough I have not heard of anyone being able to set up their screenreader to tell them the percentage of each band of the equaliser in Winamp 2.x, you can make changes via the keyboard and listen to the results to see how you like it. Also, Control+s brings up a list of over 20 presets that you can choose from. First though, you will need to open the graphical equaliser if it is not open already. You can do this with the Alt+G combination. - The 1 and 0 keys increase their respective band of the ten band equaliser. 1 is the lowest band IE base, 0 is the highest band, IE treble. The row underneath decreases each band, from the q to the P keys. So 1 and Q turns the lowest band up and down respectively, 0 and P turns the highest band up and down respectively.
- Similarly, the tilde and tab keys turn the pre-amp up and down respectively.
- The N key toggles the equaliser on and off, so if it doesn’t sound like what you are doing with the number and qwerty rows is having any effect, try pressing the N key to turn the equaliser on.
- S opens the presets menu.
The A key toggles auto-loading of the equaliser. Up ConclusionI hope that this gets you started. Feel free to drop me a note with any questions, ask on the PC-Audio list, and visit the Winamp Documentation. [/responsivevoice] Laatst bijgewerkt op: 3/05/14 Primaire Sidebar<div class="statcounter"><a title="WordPress hit counter" href="https://statcounter.com/wordpress.org/" class="statcounter"><img class="statcounter" src="//c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/1/" alt="WordPress hit counter" /></a></div> <div class="statcounter"><a title="web analytics" href="https://statcounter.com/"><img class="statcounter" src="https://c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/0/" alt="web analytics" /></a></div> Original textContribute a better translation On 4/19/2019 7:08 PM, Tom wrote:
Hi, How can I increase the volume in Winamp? Thanks Tom
|
|
Re: JAWS WITH AN EXTERNAL SOUND CARD
#advisory
I haven't had anything like that happen here either and I have two of those 10 dollar usb sound adapters that work great for jaws to use and I have all other sounds coming from the system sound device on the motherboard. Legend has it that on Saturday 4/20/2019 12:24 AM, Sieghard Weitzel said: ---------------------------------------- Hi Bill,
I have switched to other sound cards numerous times in Windows and it nsever cause anything like what you described. My guess is that it was one of these weird things which sometimes happen but that does not mean they will happen again.
From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Bill White Sent: Friday, April 19, 2019 6:50 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: JAWS WITH AN EXTERNAL SOUND CARD #advisory
Yes, you can. Be advised, however, that while setting another sound card as my default, I have lost my sound drivers, as well as the registry entries associated with my built-in sound card several times, and have needed sighted help to restore both the registry entries and the drivers. So:
1. Back up the registry before changing the default sound card. 2. Keep copies of your sound drivers.
Bill White
<mailto:billwhite92701@dslextreme.com>billwhite92701@dslextreme.com
From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Marty Hutchings Sent: Friday, April 19, 2019 6:33 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: JAWS WITH AN EXTERNAL SOUND CARD #advisory
I am about to install JAWS on an Aser laptop with Windows 10 and I want to be able to run a media program like Winamp and not have JAWS speak through the same speakers. Can I add an external USB sound card that I can plug speakers into for the music media and have JAWS speak through headphones plugged into the laptop's built in jack? I currently have a Windows 7 desktop with a Sound Blaster card that I play music through while JAWS speaks through the mother board sound jack.
----------------------------------------
|
|
Bill White <billwhite92701@...>
Hi, Marty. I respectfully disagree. I have my equalizer window inactivated so that it does not open (ALT plus G). When I am in the main window, so that I can pause a track with the letter C, Up and Down arrows increase and decrease volume.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Marty Hutchings Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 7:27 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Winamp volume The Up and Down arrows only work for volume when you are in the EQ Tab. To get there, use Control Tab twice from the Play List Editor Tab. Love in Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness, against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places. Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12, 13 Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 4:06 AM Subject: Re: Winamp volume Thanks to those who answered my query regarding how to increase the volume in Winamp. Unfortunately pressing the up or down arrow while playing an mp3 file does not change the volume level at all. It seems to be stuck at the one low fairly dull level. Any suggestions what I can try next? Thanks Tom From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Randy Barnett Sent: Saturday, 20 April 2019 12:29 PM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Winamp volume From the following: keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume. - Keypad 2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Introduction
On the face of it, Winamp from Nullsoft may not seem like a terribly accessible programme. Although the interface from the keyboard is somewhat unorthodox, you’ll find that Winamp is in fact one of the most accessible of the fully featured MP3 players. This article seeks to help you understand what Winamp can do, how to configure it, and all the keyboard secrets will be revealed. You can get a brief keyboard summary of all of the keyboard commands mentioned in this document, and a few I won’t be covering, by pressing F1 from the Winamp main window. From there, you can press Control+Tab through the multipage dialogue box until you get to the tips and tricks section. If you left click your mouse on any of the text of the edit box, this will give that read-only edit box focus, which means that you can then read the summary with your screenreader’s continuous reading feature. You can also go to the top of this edit box with the Control+home combination, press Control+Shift+end to select the entire edit box (Control+A doesn’t seem to work) and then press Control+C to copy it to the clipboard. You may then want to paste this into a word processor or text editor and save it for future reference. Winamp is a fully featured audio player, supporting most common file formats. If a file format isn’t supported out of the box, chances are you can get a plug-in that will do the job. It has a playlist editor allowing you to import individual files, entire directories and locations from the Internet. Files can then be randomised, or sorted by a number of criteria including song name and file name. A graphical equaliser allows you to make major adjustments to the sound of the player. You can choose from presets, save your own settings, and even specify your own settings on a song by song basis. The ID3 editor allows you to edit MP3 tag information, which is a handy way of recording information such as the album, the artist, the year the song was released and more. The plug-in architecture of Winamp means that fantastic add-ins are being released regularly, ranging from the support of many file formats through to pitch changers and audio compressors. Up Basic Winamp OperationWhen you install Winamp, you are asked if you want it to be your default audio player. If you answer yes to this question, Winamp will be launched from Windows Explorer or Internet Explorer when a file that Winamp supports is encountered. The file will start playing automatically. You can also launch Winamp by going to the Start menu, choosing programmes, then Winamp. When in Winamp, the following commands can be used for playback. Note that some of the keypad commands listed here may conflict with your screenreader. You will need to change your screenreader’s key settings or use its bypass key if you wish to use the keypad in Winamp. - X or Keypad 5 will play the current file. If Winamp is paused, this command will resume playing from where you paused. If no file is loaded into Winamp, you’ll be prompted for a file name.
- The V key stops playing. If you hold down the Shift key, Winamp fades out the currently playing song and then stops.
- B or keypad 6 skips to the next track. You can do this either when Winamp is playing or when it is stopped. If you are playing a file when you press this key, the next song in the queue will start playing immediately. If you press the key when Winamp is stopped, the song you have now selected will show in the window title with the word “stopped” beside it.
- Z or Keypad 4 skips back to the previous track. The same rules apply as for next track discussed above.
- Keypad 1 will jump ten songs back in the playlist.
- Keypad 3 jumps ten songs forward.
- Left-arrow or keypad 7 rewinds by 5 seconds.
- Right-arrow or keypad 9 fastforwards by 5 seconds.
- L or keypad 0 brings up the open file dialogue. Here, you can specify the name of a file provided Winamp supports the file format. You can also specify a playlist with a .m3u or .pls extension.
- Control+L or Control+keypad 0 lets you specify a file on the Internet. You will need the full URL of the file or playlist.
- Shift+L or the insert key lets you specify a directory to play. All files in that directory with file formats that Winamp supports will be played.
- Keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad 2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Up Configuring WinampWinamp is highly configurable. This section seeks to help you understand how to navigate Winamp’s Preferences. To enter the preferences, press Control+P. Winamp will present you with a treeview. As in any treeview, you use the right-arrow key to eXPand a branch of the tree, the left-arrow to close a branch, and the down-arrow to navigate through items in the tree. Once you’ve selected a section, you can use the tab and Shift+Tab keys to navigate through the various elements. When you get to the section for selecting and configuring plug-ins, it is important to understand that after you have selected the plug-in with the arrow keys, there is often a configure button which allows you to fine-tune the settings for that particular plug-in. Normally, you need to press the tab key to find the configure button. Pressing the space bar will bring up the configuration dialogue box for that plug-in. Up The Playlist EditorThe Playlist Editor is one of Winamp’s less accessible features, but there is more that you can do with the keyboard than many people think. The major difficulty is that with most screenreaders, using the arrow keys in Winamp 2.x will not give you reliable information about the song that you’ve selected. I have heard that some Windoweyes users have got it to work to some degree thanks to some clever set file manipulation, but I never have. Anyway, let’s take a look at what you can do with the keyboard. Firstly, you will want to get into the Playlist Editor. If the Playlist Editor window isn’t open yet, you will need to open it by pressing Control+E. Incidentally, once Windows such as the Playlist Editor are open, you can cycle through all open Windows with the Control+Tab combination. - The R key toggles the repeat function. I have always had difficulty determining the status of the repeat function from the Playlist Editor window itself, but you can also toggle the repeat function from the main Winamp Menu, which can be accessed from the main Winamp window with Alt+F, and then choosing playback options. Here, your screenreader should have no trouble telling you whether repeat is checked or not.
- The S key toggles whether shuffle is on or off. The same applies here as for the repeat function.
- L or keypad 0 adds a file to the playlist.
- Control+L or Control+keypad 0 adds an Internet location to the playlist.
- Shift+L or the insert key adds a directory to the playlist.
- Control+N clears the playlist and lets you start from scratch.
- Control+O lets you open a playlist you might previously have saved to disk.
- Control+S saves the playlist you’ve been working on. You have a number of formats from which you can choose once you open the save dialogue. .m3u is probably the best in most cases, because the playlist is saved as a standard text file with one file per line. This makes it easy to edit your playlist with a text editor given that Winamp’s editing features are not screenreader friendly.
- Alt+3 views the track information for the selected track or tracks.
- Control+E lets you edit the names of the selected track or tracks, but keep in mind that with screenreaders, it’s quite difficult to determine exactly what is selected.
- Control+A selects the entire playlist.
- Control+I inverts the selection, in other words what was selected becomes unselected and vice versa.
- The delete key removes selected files from the playlist.
- Control+delete crops the playlist.
- Control+Shift+delete clears the playlist.
- Alt+down-arrow moves selected files down.
- Alt+up-arrow moves selected files up.
- The down and up-arrow keys move the cursor down and up respectively, but as has been discussed, you are unlikely to get reliable feedback from your screenreader because of the custom window type Winamp is using.
- The ENTER key plays the selected file.
- The home and end keys jump to the start and end of the playlist respectively.
- Page up and page down move up and down by a fifth of a page.
- Alt+delete removes all non-existent files from a playlist.
- Control+Shift+1 sorts the playlist by title.
- Control+Shift+2 sorts the playlist by file name.
- Control+Shift+3 sorts the playlist by file path and name.
- Control+R reverses the order of the playlist.
- Control+Shift+R randomises the playlist.
Also, all playback Controls are available as they are in the main window. Up Graphical EqualiserAlthough I have not heard of anyone being able to set up their screenreader to tell them the percentage of each band of the equaliser in Winamp 2.x, you can make changes via the keyboard and listen to the results to see how you like it. Also, Control+s brings up a list of over 20 presets that you can choose from. First though, you will need to open the graphical equaliser if it is not open already. You can do this with the Alt+G combination. - The 1 and 0 keys increase their respective band of the ten band equaliser. 1 is the lowest band IE base, 0 is the highest band, IE treble. The row underneath decreases each band, from the q to the P keys. So 1 and Q turns the lowest band up and down respectively, 0 and P turns the highest band up and down respectively.
- Similarly, the tilde and tab keys turn the pre-amp up and down respectively.
- The N key toggles the equaliser on and off, so if it doesn’t sound like what you are doing with the number and qwerty rows is having any effect, try pressing the N key to turn the equaliser on.
- S opens the presets menu.
The A key toggles auto-loading of the equaliser. Up ConclusionI hope that this gets you started. Feel free to drop me a note with any questions, ask on the PC-Audio list, and visit the Winamp Documentation. [/responsivevoice] Laatst bijgewerkt op: 3/05/14 Primaire Sidebar<div class="statcounter"><a title="WordPress hit counter" href="https://statcounter.com/wordpress.org/" class="statcounter"><img class="statcounter" src="//c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/1/" alt="WordPress hit counter" /></a></div> <div class="statcounter"><a title="web analytics" href="https://statcounter.com/"><img class="statcounter" src="https://c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/0/" alt="web analytics" /></a></div> Original textContribute a better translation On 4/19/2019 7:08 PM, Tom wrote:
Hi, How can I increase the volume in Winamp? Thanks Tom
|
|
The Up and Down arrows only work for volume when you are in the EQ
Tab. To get there, use Control Tab twice from the Play List Editor
Tab.
Love in
Christ Marty For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against
the rulers, against the powers, against the world forces of this darkness,
against the spiritual forces of wickedness in the heavenly places.
Therefore, take up the full armor of God, so that you will be able to resist
in the evil day, and having done everything, to stand firm. Ephesians 6:12,
13
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2019 4:06 AM
Subject: Re: Winamp volume
Thanks
to those who answered my query regarding how to increase the volume in Winamp.
Unfortunately
pressing the up or down arrow while playing an mp3 file does not change the
volume level at all. It seems to be
stuck at the one low fairly dull level.
Any
suggestions what I can try next?
Thanks
Tom
From:
main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Randy
Barnett Sent: Saturday, 20 April 2019 12:29 PM To:
main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Winamp
volume
From
the following: keypad 8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad 2 or down-arrow
turns the volume down.
Introduction
On the face of it, Winamp from
Nullsoft may not seem like a terribly accessible programme. Although the
interface from the keyboard is somewhat unorthodox, you’ll find that Winamp is
in fact one of the most accessible of the fully featured MP3 players. This
article seeks to help you understand what Winamp can do, how to configure it,
and all the keyboard secrets will be revealed.
You can get a brief keyboard
summary of all of the keyboard commands mentioned in this document, and a few I
won’t be covering, by pressing F1 from the Winamp main window. From there, you
can press Control+Tab through the multipage dialogue box until you get to the
tips and tricks section. If you left click your mouse on any of the text of the
edit box, this will give that read-only edit box focus, which means that you can
then read the summary with your screenreader’s continuous reading feature. You
can also go to the top of this edit box with the Control+home combination, press
Control+Shift+end to select the entire edit box (Control+A doesn’t seem to work)
and then press Control+C to copy it to the clipboard. You may then want to paste
this into a word processor or text editor and save it for future
reference.
Winamp is a fully featured audio
player, supporting most common file formats. If a file format isn’t supported
out of the box, chances are you can get a plug-in that will do the
job.
It has a playlist editor allowing
you to import individual files, entire directories and locations from the
Internet. Files can then be randomised, or sorted by a number of criteria
including song name and file name.
A graphical equaliser allows you
to make major adjustments to the sound of the player. You can choose from
presets, save your own settings, and even specify your own settings on a song by
song basis. The ID3 editor allows you to edit MP3 tag information, which is a
handy way of recording information such as the album, the artist, the year the
song was released and more.
The plug-in architecture of
Winamp means that fantastic add-ins are being released regularly, ranging from
the support of many file formats through to pitch changers and audio
compressors.
Up
Basic
Winamp Operation
When you install Winamp, you are
asked if you want it to be your default audio player. If you answer yes to this
question, Winamp will be launched from Windows Explorer or Internet Explorer
when a file that Winamp supports is encountered. The file will start playing
automatically.
You can also launch Winamp by
going to the Start menu, choosing programmes, then Winamp.
When in Winamp, the following
commands can be used for playback. Note that some of the keypad commands listed
here may conflict with your screenreader. You will need to change your
screenreader’s key settings or use its bypass key if you wish to use the keypad
in Winamp.
- X or
Keypad 5 will play the current file. If Winamp is paused, this command will
resume playing from where you paused. If no file is loaded into Winamp, you’ll
be prompted for a file name.
- The
V key stops playing. If you hold down the Shift key, Winamp fades out the
currently playing song and then stops.
- B or
keypad 6 skips to the next track. You can do this either when Winamp is
playing or when it is stopped. If you are playing a file when you press this
key, the next song in the queue will start playing immediately. If you press
the key when Winamp is stopped, the song you have now selected will show in
the window title with the word “stopped” beside it.
- Z or
Keypad 4 skips back to the previous track. The same rules apply as for next
track discussed above.
- Keypad
1 will jump ten songs back in the playlist.
- Keypad
3 jumps ten songs forward.
- Left-arrow
or keypad 7 rewinds by 5 seconds.
- Right-arrow
or keypad 9 fastforwards by 5 seconds.
- L or
keypad 0 brings up the open file dialogue. Here, you can specify the name of a
file provided Winamp supports the file format. You can also specify a playlist
with a .m3u or .pls extension.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 lets you specify a file on the Internet. You will need the
full URL of the file or playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key lets you specify a directory to play. All files in that
directory with file formats that Winamp supports will be
played.
- Keypad
8 or up-arrow increases the volume.
- Keypad
2 or down-arrow turns the volume down.
Up
Configuring
Winamp
Winamp is highly configurable.
This section seeks to help you understand how to navigate Winamp’s
Preferences.
To enter the preferences, press
Control+P. Winamp will present you with a treeview. As in any treeview, you use
the right-arrow key to eXPand a branch of the tree, the left-arrow to close a
branch, and the down-arrow to navigate through items in the tree. Once you’ve
selected a section, you can use the tab and Shift+Tab keys to navigate through
the various elements.
When you get to the section for
selecting and configuring plug-ins, it is important to understand that after you
have selected the plug-in with the arrow keys, there is often a configure button
which allows you to fine-tune the settings for that particular plug-in.
Normally, you need to press the tab key to find the configure button. Pressing
the space bar will bring up the configuration dialogue box for that
plug-in.
Up
The
Playlist Editor
The Playlist Editor is one of
Winamp’s less accessible features, but there is more that you can do with the
keyboard than many people think. The major difficulty is that with most
screenreaders, using the arrow keys in Winamp 2.x will not give you reliable
information about the song that you’ve selected. I have heard that some
Windoweyes users have got it to work to some degree thanks to some clever set
file manipulation, but I never have.
Anyway, let’s take a look at what
you can do with the keyboard. Firstly, you will want to get into the Playlist
Editor. If the Playlist Editor window isn’t open yet, you will need to open it
by pressing Control+E. Incidentally, once Windows such as the Playlist Editor
are open, you can cycle through all open Windows with the Control+Tab
combination.
- The
R key toggles the repeat function. I have always had difficulty determining
the status of the repeat function from the Playlist Editor window itself, but
you can also toggle the repeat function from the main Winamp Menu, which can
be accessed from the main Winamp window with Alt+F, and then choosing playback
options. Here, your screenreader should have no trouble telling you whether
repeat is checked or not.
- The
S key toggles whether shuffle is on or off. The same applies here as for the
repeat function.
- L or
keypad 0 adds a file to the playlist.
- Control+L
or Control+keypad 0 adds an Internet location to the
playlist.
- Shift+L
or the insert key adds a directory to the playlist.
- Control+N
clears the playlist and lets you start from scratch.
- Control+O
lets you open a playlist you might previously have saved to
disk.
- Control+S
saves the playlist you’ve been working on. You have a number of formats from
which you can choose once you open the save dialogue. .m3u is probably the
best in most cases, because the playlist is saved as a standard text file with
one file per line. This makes it easy to edit your playlist with a text editor
given that Winamp’s editing features are not screenreader
friendly.
- Alt+3
views the track information for the selected track or
tracks.
- Control+E
lets you edit the names of the selected track or tracks, but keep in mind that
with screenreaders, it’s quite difficult to determine exactly what is
selected.
- Control+A
selects the entire playlist.
- Control+I
inverts the selection, in other words what was selected becomes unselected and
vice versa.
- The
delete key removes selected files from the playlist.
- Control+delete
crops the playlist.
- Control+Shift+delete
clears the playlist.
- Alt+down-arrow
moves selected files down.
- Alt+up-arrow
moves selected files up.
- The
down and up-arrow keys move the cursor down and up respectively, but as has
been discussed, you are unlikely to get reliable feedback from your
screenreader because of the custom window type Winamp is
using.
- The
ENTER key plays the selected file.
- The
home and end keys jump to the start and end of the playlist
respectively.
- Page
up and page down move up and down by a fifth of a page.
- Alt+delete
removes all non-existent files from a playlist.
- Control+Shift+1
sorts the playlist by title.
- Control+Shift+2
sorts the playlist by file name.
- Control+Shift+3
sorts the playlist by file path and name.
- Control+R
reverses the order of the playlist.
- Control+Shift+R
randomises the playlist.
Also, all playback Controls are
available as they are in the main window.
Up
Graphical
Equaliser
Although I have not heard of
anyone being able to set up their screenreader to tell them the percentage of
each band of the equaliser in Winamp 2.x, you can make changes via the keyboard
and listen to the results to see how you like it. Also, Control+s brings up a
list of over 20 presets that you can choose from.
First though, you will need to
open the graphical equaliser if it is not open already. You can do this with the
Alt+G combination.
- The
1 and 0 keys increase their respective band of the ten band equaliser. 1 is
the lowest band IE base, 0 is the highest band, IE treble. The row underneath
decreases each band, from the q to the P keys. So 1 and Q turns the lowest
band up and down respectively, 0 and P turns the highest band up and down
respectively.
- Similarly,
the tilde and tab keys turn the pre-amp up and down
respectively.
- The
N key toggles the equaliser on and off, so if it doesn’t sound like what you
are doing with the number and qwerty rows is having any effect, try pressing
the N key to turn the equaliser on.
- S
opens the presets menu.
The A key toggles auto-loading of
the equaliser.
Up
Conclusion
I hope that this gets you
started. Feel free to drop me a note with any questions, ask on the PC-Audio
list, and visit the Winamp Documentation.
[/responsivevoice]
Laatst bijgewerkt op:
3/05/14
Primaire
Sidebar
<div
class="statcounter"><a title="WordPress hit counter" href="https://statcounter.com/wordpress.org/"
class="statcounter"><img class="statcounter"
src="//c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/1/" alt="WordPress hit counter"
/></a></div>
<div
class="statcounter"><a title="web analytics" href="https://statcounter.com/"><img
class="statcounter" src="https://c.statcounter.com/8771412/0/3ce4566c/0/"
alt="web analytics" /></a></div>
Original
text
Contribute a better
translation
On 4/19/2019 7:08 PM, Tom
wrote:
Hi,
How can I increase the volume in Winamp?
Thanks
Tom
|
|
if the sleeve is gone but the disc is still available, one of the files on the disc has an extension of fsac which is preceeded by the 20 alpha numeric character name that represents your authorization number.
but if the disc is gone too, calling FS and asking for it is the only way.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-------- Original Message -------- From: Sieghard Weitzel [mailto:sieghard@live.ca] To: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> Date: Friday, April 19, 2019, 2:41 PM Subject: Jaws 2019 Auth Code? You should have received a Jaws 2019 DVD at some point, your authorization code would be on the sleeve of that DVD in braille. If you don’t have that any more you probably have to call Freedom Scientific, tell them you don’t have the authorization code any more and I assume after proper identification they would provide it to you. I have had mine written down in a little file on my computer where I keep such things for so long that I don’t even remember any more when I did this and if I do a new install I just open said Notepad file, copy it to the clibboard and paste it in the appropriate place during the authorization. From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Claudia Sent: Friday, April 19, 2019 8:03 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Jaws 2019 Auth Code? Can anyone please advise where I would find the Jaws Authorization code if a completely new JFW 2019 version was installed on my Windows 10 laptop, after I purchased it? Thanks. On Apr 19, 2019, at 8:03 AM, Richard Turner <richardturner42@outlook.com<mailto:richardturner42@outlook.com>> wrote: Using Jaws 2019, Win 10, how does one play an entire DVD, or at least the actual movie and not all the previews, etc. I can get it playing, but it seems to get stuck in the loop and I’ve gone through the various menus, but haven’t quite figured it out. Any tips would be useful. Richard Check out my web site at: www.turner42.com< http://www.turner42.com> “The Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy has this to say on the subject of flying. There is an art, it says, or rather, a knack to flying. The knack lies in learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." --Douglas Adams, from Life, The Universe and Everything, p.59
|
|