Re: What gives with disabled keystrokes
Lisle, Ted (CHFS DMS)
I'd try a repair, but he may need IT help to do that in a locked-down
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network environment. If I'm not mistaken, he may be able to ask for and obtain administrative or power user privileges just for JAWS, since he's probably the only one in the shop using it. That was one of the real positives in vista.
-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com [mailto:jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com] On Behalf Of Chris Smart Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 8:37 PM To: The Jaws for Windows support list. Subject: Re: What gives with disabled keystrokes Edward, I doubt it has anything to do with Windows 7. I've had nothing disappear with either Jaws 11 or 12 under Windows 7 X64. From what you said about allowing or blocking dll's, am I right to assume you're using Jaws at work? Perhaps the problem is with something your network administrator did or didn't do. Something else you can try is running a repair on Jaws. The following page gives instructions: http://www.freedomscientific.com/fs_support/BulletinView.asp?QC=1057 Chris _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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Re: making an audio CD
Chris Smart <csmart8@...>
I believe the full version of Nero is accessible, Nero Burning Rom it's called, and free too!
I'm not using the latest version so things may have changed, but you need to have the box checked to include CD Text on the CD. Also, have your tracks tagged properly if they are in a compressed form like mp3, or bring up the properties of each track within Nero and enter the artist, title etc. Chris
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Re: Scanning books
Chris Smart <csmart8@...>
Elf, just to be clear in case anybody is googling for abbyy it's spelled A B B Y Y
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At 11:34 PM 8/2/2011, you wrote:
I follow what they mean. and not really, unless you use some sort of OCR jaws has nothing to read.
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Re: JAWS and Safe mode in Windows
curtis jackson
but their is a file that you can down load to the registry that will allow you to load screen readers like nvda or ones who don't use mirror drivers if you have a usb sound card
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On Aug 3, 2011, at 3:09 AM, Anders Boholdt-Petersen wrote:
Hi everyone,
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Re: JAWS and Safe mode in Windows
James Homuth
No sir. Windows doesn't load anything it doesn't absolutely need in safe
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mode. This includes things like your audio drivers. Therefore, JAWS won't work no matter what version of JAWS or Windows you run.
-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com [mailto:jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com] On Behalf Of Anders Boholdt-Petersen Sent: August 3, 2011 4:10 AM To: jfw@lists.the-jdh.com Subject: JAWS and Safe mode in Windows Hi everyone, It is posible to using JAWS for Windows, if I boot up my computer (Windows XP Service Pack 3 and Windows 7 64-bit) into the "Safe Mode"? I using JAWS 11 and JAWS 12. Very thanks for your answer. Regards, Anders _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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JAWS and Safe mode in Windows
Anders Boholdt-Petersen
Hi everyone,
It is posible to using JAWS for Windows, if I boot up my computer (Windows XP Service Pack 3 and Windows 7 64-bit) into the "Safe Mode"? I using JAWS 11 and JAWS 12. Very thanks for your answer. Regards, Anders
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Re: [Bulk] making an audio CD
Dave...
Google this version of Nero to see if you can get it. It's very good with
JAWS. Nero-6.6.1.15a Dave Carlson From my Dell Latitude 630, currently not nearly close enough for my comfortto my Audio Recording and Mixing Studios, San Francisco Bay Area. But I'll try to remedy that situation. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jim L" <jimscave@tpg.com.au> To: "'The Jaws for Windows support list.'" <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 23:07 Subject: [Bulk] making an audio CD Heya folks, Am wanting to make an audio CD compilation with Jaws 11 and include the CD text which I know can be done with nero express which Im having problems getting Jaws to read menu's and buttons. Is there a fully compatiable CD burning software I can use with my Jaws 11 even if I need to purchase it, of course if theres a free one that's even better. Regards, Jim -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.the-jdh.com/pipermail/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com/attachments/20110803/377467b9/attachment.html> _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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making an audio CD
Jim L
Heya folks,
Am wanting to make an audio CD compilation with Jaws 11 and include the CD text which I know can be done with nero express which Im having problems getting Jaws to read menu's and buttons. Is there a fully compatiable CD burning software I can use with my Jaws 11 even if I need to purchase it, of course if theres a free one that's even better. Regards, Jim -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.the-jdh.com/pipermail/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com/attachments/20110803/377467b9/attachment.html>
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Re: JAWS and PAC Mates
Richard Holloway
You're right, I should do just that-- I'll let you know what I learn.
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On Aug 3, 2011, at 1:34 AM, Farfar on Laptop wrote:
Richard,
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Re: JAWS and PAC Mates
Dave...
Richard,
The default install of JAWS does indicate a "Authorize JAWS from Pacmate" option, but I have no idea how this works. I never paid any attention to it, and I even have a Pacmate. Why not give FS a call and see if you can "stump Tech Support"? 727-803-8600 Dave Carlson From my Dell Latitude 630, currently not nearly close enough for my comfortto my Audio Recording and Mixing Studios, San Francisco Bay Area. But I'll try to remedy that situation. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Holloway" <rholloway@gopbc.org> To: "The Jaws for Windows support list." <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 22:23 Subject: JAWS and PAC Mates At the last NFB Convention in Dallas (last month) someone at the FS booth mentioned that one can apparently fully-enable demo Jaws on any PC by plugging a PAC Mate into the PC with a USB cable. How long has this worked? The only machine I have JAWS on here is already setup with a license (Jaws 11), but I'd love it if my daughter could use JAWS on other computers, say at a friend's house, for example if she just plugged in a PAC Mate. Is there a way to check before trying-- some software version number perhaps? It is a PAC Mate Omni that we bought when they were still fairly new (2007-ish maybe?) and we had a couple of years of SMA's and all of those extended service things. It sort of killed me thinking we could have possibly had the same functionality at home this way without the extra $1000 expense, but I don't know if this capacity came out later or if we were just never told we had bought this feature. _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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Re: Windows 7 32 bit or 64 bit
Richard Holloway
Absolutely, quick and hard to deal with. FS-tech support surely could have done better with it all. It was years ago but quite frustrating and traumatic, so I wanted to try an offer some potentially helpful info. when I read that someone was thinking if doing a 32-bit to 64-bit upgrade to a machine based on a technician's recommendation / offer. In a very long-winded way, I was trying to point out that it may not be as safe or simple as the tech was leading the poster to believe.
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Sorry if I ruffled any feathers as it was not my intention at all.
On Aug 3, 2011, at 12:22 AM, James Homuth wrote:
Sounds like your problem falls largely on FS tech support, as their own
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JAWS and PAC Mates
Richard Holloway
At the last NFB Convention in Dallas (last month) someone at the FS booth mentioned that one can apparently fully-enable demo Jaws on any PC by plugging a PAC Mate into the PC with a USB cable.
How long has this worked? The only machine I have JAWS on here is already setup with a license (Jaws 11), but I'd love it if my daughter could use JAWS on other computers, say at a friend's house, for example if she just plugged in a PAC Mate. Is there a way to check before trying-- some software version number perhaps? It is a PAC Mate Omni that we bought when they were still fairly new (2007-ish maybe?) and we had a couple of years of SMA's and all of those extended service things. It sort of killed me thinking we could have possibly had the same functionality at home this way without the extra $1000 expense, but I don't know if this capacity came out later or if we were just never told we had bought this feature.
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Re: Windows 7 32 bit or 64 bit
James Homuth
Sounds like your problem falls largely on FS tech support, as their own
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documentation when 64-bit Vista was released said JAWS 9 will absolutely not work on 64-bit Vista. There was no 64-bit version of JAWS 9, because at the time, that was still relatively new in the Windows community--most computers barely warranted running 64-bit in 2007. Having done tech support for a computer manufacturer, I can tell you for sure in the early days of Vista 64-bit, you didn't need to be running JAWS or Window Eyes to be having problems. It's just that if you were, you found those problems a whole lot quicker and a whole lot harder to deal with.
-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com [mailto:jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com] On Behalf Of Richard Holloway Sent: August 3, 2011 12:15 AM To: The Jaws for Windows support list. Subject: Re: Windows 7 32 bit or 64 bit Right, but it doesn't matter why an item doesn't (or a few items don't) work nearly as much as what can happen if you do try and use problematic software. That's sort of my entire point. If everyone had current versions of software and new hardware, none of this would ever come up in the first place... If someone is going from a 32-bit setup to a 64-bit and they don't know about the potential problem, they can end up in a real jam if they try to load something like JAWS 9 on a 64-bit PC. At least in some cases, it can completely trash the OS and make the machine non-bootable. When this happened to us, the only safe fix was to wipe the drive clean and install a fresh operating system, so even if this were the only 32-bit program that had issues (and it isn't) that alone makes a bit of caution prudent. I'm just wanting to help people avoid what happened to us several years ago, and the very fact that there aren't a lot of 32-bit packages that cause this kind of a disaster makes it all the more likely that even a professional computer tech might figure the old version is safe to try and load, trashing your operating system in the attempt, possibly causing other data loss or any number of other frustrations. This is sort of like explaining to someone who has never had a computer virus how important it is to avoid getting a computer virus. Once it happens to you, it makes a lot more sense, and you REALLY wish you had known before you took certain chances. Otherwise, why would someone carry on about it so much? It is also worth mentioning again that 32-bit virus protection, is generally a problem with 64-bit setups, as are certain 32-bit database programs and CAD programs. Anything 32-bit with embedded drivers will probably be an issue and there may be problems finding certain external driver solutions for some equipment (especially older pieces). Also, if you have any really old 16-bit applications, I'm not aware of a solution to run them under a 64-bit system. (It might be possible by running an emulator under another emulator, but I've only personally done that with Macs.) Those are the items that come to my mind, and surely there are many more which I'm not aware of. Some problems may be greater than others depending on which 64-bit OS you're running (Vista, vs. Windows 7, for example.) I'm rather new to the JAWS world and to this listserv, so I ask questions that a new user may tend to ask, but I've been dealing with computers quite heavily since the very early 1980's. I'm not trying to make myself sound like some super-expert, but I have been around the block a time or two. I'm just trying to make certain people understand there are risks associated with these upgrades if they are not fully researched. Even as a fairly knowledgable computer user, I ended up with a trashed OS from trying to load 32-bit JAWS 9 on a 64-bit Vista PC, so can this happen to others. My big mistake was that I had just asked Freedom Scientific what the (then-current) JAWS 9 worked on, so I didn't think twice about loading this on a new 64-bit machine a week or so later. How many here would question their computer tech if told "oh yes, you can run any 32-bit software on your new setup, just give me your JAWS 9 disks and I'll load that up for you on the your new machine"? Until this happened to me, I'd have trusted such a tech as well. If people don't want to use my bad experience to avoid a huge mess on their computer, so be it, and I know this is much less likely to happen very often than back in 2007. I'm just trying to help if a few people might not know about this stuff. This isn't theoretical, it happened to me, it was repeatable (tech support initially initially had me wipe the drive repeatedly and reinstall Vista and JAWS) and it wasted more hours of my time than I even care to remember. So if people want to ignore my advice, no worries; they'll figure this out in their own way... On Aug 2, 2011, at 12:33 PM, Steve wrote: That's because Jaws 9 wasn't out in a 64-bit version.those are the main exceptions; you need the Jaws 64-bit version to run on a 64-bit machine. The first 64-bit version of Jaws was 10, and the first 64-bit version of Win Eyes was 7.1. <rholloway@gopbc.org> To: "The Jaws for Windows support list." <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com>Vista PC when we bought a 64-bit machine), at least under Vista, as well as most (if not all) virus protection software. although I suppose there may be some. But, that is what the Programs\x86 folder is for, that's where the 32-bit programs that run in Win 7 or Vista 64-bit editions live. installation DVD, it will recognize which version you need for your system; if not, just go to the FS site and download the correct version. <rholloway@gopbc.org>Take my advice, I don't use it anyway. the data; literally 32 or 64 pieces of information at a time (specificallyTo: "The Jaws for Windows support list." <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com> that many ones or zeros at a time-- that's what a "bit" is, a one or a zero in binary computing. Multiple bits comprise a byte. Enough bytes make a "k", then megs, gigs, etc.) Applications vary. You can run some 32 bit applications on some 64 bit machines which I assume requires some sort of emulation mode by the OS which may be transparent to the user. 64 bit applications won't work for 32 bit. had no intention of supporting 64 bit machines in the future. Once most new machines started going 32 bit, they changed their tune a bit. (Pun intended.) both are currently supported one way or another. wrote:32 often.Hi, 7 32 bit or 64 bit? _______________________________________________ _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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Re: Windows 7 32 bit or 64 bit
Richard Holloway
Right, but it doesn't matter why an item doesn't (or a few items don't) work nearly as much as what can happen if you do try and use problematic software. That's sort of my entire point. If everyone had current versions of software and new hardware, none of this would ever come up in the first place...
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
If someone is going from a 32-bit setup to a 64-bit and they don't know about the potential problem, they can end up in a real jam if they try to load something like JAWS 9 on a 64-bit PC. At least in some cases, it can completely trash the OS and make the machine non-bootable. When this happened to us, the only safe fix was to wipe the drive clean and install a fresh operating system, so even if this were the only 32-bit program that had issues (and it isn't) that alone makes a bit of caution prudent. I'm just wanting to help people avoid what happened to us several years ago, and the very fact that there aren't a lot of 32-bit packages that cause this kind of a disaster makes it all the more likely that even a professional computer tech might figure the old version is safe to try and load, trashing your operating system in the attempt, possibly causing other data loss or any number of other frustrations. This is sort of like explaining to someone who has never had a computer virus how important it is to avoid getting a computer virus. Once it happens to you, it makes a lot more sense, and you REALLY wish you had known before you took certain chances. Otherwise, why would someone carry on about it so much? It is also worth mentioning again that 32-bit virus protection, is generally a problem with 64-bit setups, as are certain 32-bit database programs and CAD programs. Anything 32-bit with embedded drivers will probably be an issue and there may be problems finding certain external driver solutions for some equipment (especially older pieces). Also, if you have any really old 16-bit applications, I'm not aware of a solution to run them under a 64-bit system. (It might be possible by running an emulator under another emulator, but I've only personally done that with Macs.) Those are the items that come to my mind, and surely there are many more which I'm not aware of. Some problems may be greater than others depending on which 64-bit OS you're running (Vista, vs. Windows 7, for example.) I'm rather new to the JAWS world and to this listserv, so I ask questions that a new user may tend to ask, but I've been dealing with computers quite heavily since the very early 1980's. I'm not trying to make myself sound like some super-expert, but I have been around the block a time or two. I'm just trying to make certain people understand there are risks associated with these upgrades if they are not fully researched. Even as a fairly knowledgable computer user, I ended up with a trashed OS from trying to load 32-bit JAWS 9 on a 64-bit Vista PC, so can this happen to others. My big mistake was that I had just asked Freedom Scientific what the (then-current) JAWS 9 worked on, so I didn't think twice about loading this on a new 64-bit machine a week or so later. How many here would question their computer tech if told "oh yes, you can run any 32-bit software on your new setup, just give me your JAWS 9 disks and I'll load that up for you on the your new machine"? Until this happened to me, I'd have trusted such a tech as well. If people don't want to use my bad experience to avoid a huge mess on their computer, so be it, and I know this is much less likely to happen very often than back in 2007. I'm just trying to help if a few people might not know about this stuff. This isn't theoretical, it happened to me, it was repeatable (tech support initially initially had me wipe the drive repeatedly and reinstall Vista and JAWS) and it wasted more hours of my time than I even care to remember. So if people want to ignore my advice, no worries; they'll figure this out in their own way...
On Aug 2, 2011, at 12:33 PM, Steve wrote:
That's because Jaws 9 wasn't out in a 64-bit version.
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Re: bluetooth and the focus
Dave...
Richard,
Any BlueTooth dongle should work just fine. Dave Carlson From my Dell Latitude 630, currently not nearly close enough for my comfortto my Audio Recording and Mixing Studios, San Francisco Bay Area. But I'll try to remedy that situation. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Richard Holloway" <rholloway@gopbc.org> To: "The Jaws for Windows support list." <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 13:17 Subject: bluetooth and the focus The other reason I want to get away from qwerty based solutions for things like Control Keys, is I want to be able to use the built-in bluetooth wireless from across the room with the Focus 40 display. I sent a message to Freedom but have no answer so far, so I'll ask here, Sorry if this is too far from the main forum topic, but does anyone have experience with setting up bluetooth on one of these? I thought this computer had bluetooth, but the list comes up and shows no devices, and I can see the Focus Display on other machines, so I know the Focus keyboard has bluetooth active. I assume I will need to buy a bluetooth to USB adaptor for the computer and wonder who else may be using one and can confirm that a particular model gets along well with the Focus 40 Blue. If anyone knows of a forum more suited to Focus displays, I'll check there too, but it seems like these things mainly work with JAWS, or at least they are generally used with it on PC's so this is the only place I can think to check. Thanks again! _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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Re: What gives with disabled keystrokes
Adrian Spratt
Ed, others have suggested ways to solve the problem. In case it hasn't
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occurred to you, you could confirm that these keystrokes are supposed to work on your system by going into key identification mode with insert-1 above the letter rows. If nothing else, demonstrating these keystrokes in this mode to your tech guys should persuade them they need to make adjustments to the network.
-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com [mailto:jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com] On Behalf Of Marquette, Ed Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 7:42 PM To: The Jaws for Windows support list. Subject: What gives with disabled keystrokes OK. I just wrote about the disappearance of the Jaws Task Manager, formerly enabled with Jaws key (Insert) plus F-10. Now, the keystroke for starting the Jaws dictionary has disappeared. Jaws key (insert) plus D used to start the Jaws dictionary manager. That is no longer the case. Even worse, when I press Jaws key (insert) plus F-2 and then press D to locate the Dictionary Manager, when I press ENTER actually to start the Dictionary Manager, the Dictionary Manager just goes away. Any idea what's going on? If this is what we get with Windows 7, I'll gladly go back to Windows XP. OK. There may be another issue. To get JAWS to run at all on our system, our IT security monkeys had sequentially to stop group policies from "blocking" certain DLLs. Do you think that might be the problem, i.e., they didn't stop the blocking of all needed DLLs? I. Edward Marquette Direct Dial: 816.502.4646 Mobile: 816.812.0088 Google Voice: 408.692.5640 Facsimile: 816.960.0041 Kutak Rock LLP 1010 Grand Boulevard Suite 500 Kansas City, MO 64106 ed.marquette@kutakrock.com ############################################################################ ################################# ANY FEDERAL TAX ADVICE CONTAINED IN THIS MESSAGE SHOULD NOT BE USED OR REFERRED TO IN THE PROMOTING, MARKETING OR RECOMMENDING OF ANY ENTITY, INVESTMENT PLAN OR ARRANGEMENT, AND SUCH ADVICE IS NOT INTENDED OR WRITTEN TO BE USED, AND CANNOT BE USED, BY A TAXPAYER FOR THE PURPOSE OF AVOIDING PENALTIES UNDER THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE. ############################################################################ ################################# This E-mail message is confidential, is intended only for the named recipient(s) above and may contain information that is privileged, attorney work product or otherwise protected by applicable law. If you have received this message in error, please notify the sender at 402-346-6000 and delete this E-mail message. Thank you. ############################################################################ ################################# -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.the-jdh.com/pipermail/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com/attachments/201108 02/0b2ad0b1/attachment.html> _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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Re: Scanning books
inthane <inthaneelf@...>
I follow what they mean. and not really, unless you use some sort of OCR jaws has nothing to read.
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a scanned image is just that, an image, nothing to read until an OCR works the images over and attempts to turn the little marks on the picture into a text file type. now then if you need a less expensive OCR, find abbey fine reader, and then hunt for an older version (I.E. if current version is 9, then look for 8 and you can probably get it at a significant discount!) although the last time I looked AFR in the current version was running 99.95 from its maker, quite a difference between that and openbook. HTH, elf hth elf . Moderator, Blind Access Help. . Owner: Alacorn Computer Enterprises "own the might and majesty of an alacorn" www.alacorncomputer.com . proprietor: Inthane's Grab Bag for blind computer users and Programmers! http://grabbag.alacorncomputer.com
----- Original Message -----
From: "Tim" <tim@nwiusa.com> To: "The Jaws for Windows support list." <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 6:38 AM Subject: Re: Scanning books I guess I am not sure what you are asking. If you scan a book using OpenBook you can read it with JAWS.
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Re: What gives with disabled keystrokes
Steve <k8sp@...>
Ed,
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Sounds to me like you have some idea here. It is not a problem with Jaws and Win 7 computers, at least my wife's Win7 HP with Jaws 12 works fine. The dictionary works; as does the process list invoked with insert-f10. I don't know what your firm's IT folks have done, nor whether you have Jaws installed on a corporate network. I think a consult between your IT folks and a competent tech support person at FS might be helpful. WHEN INJUSTICE BECOMES LAW; RESISTANCE BECOMES DUTY -- THOMAS JEFFERSON Steve
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marquette, Ed" <Ed.Marquette@KutakRock.com> To: "The Jaws for Windows support list." <jfw@lists.the-jdh.com> Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 7:42 PM Subject: What gives with disabled keystrokes OK.
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: What gives with disabled keystrokes
Chris Smart <csmart8@...>
Really?
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Personally, I love the increased power and flexibility of 64-bit applications, the increased stability, tighter security... But, I guess it depends what you need a computer for. I need lots of power under the hood for processing audio. If I was just doing email and the web, I'd have kept my XP machine.
At 09:24 PM 8/2/2011, you wrote:
I would go back too xp if I could even if seven wasn't causing problems,
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Re: bluetooth and the focus
Ambrose <ambroselh@...>
Hp makes the best usb blue tooth adapter that I have found
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-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com [mailto:jfw-bounces@lists.the-jdh.com] On Behalf Of Richard Holloway Sent: Tuesday, August 02, 2011 4:17 PM To: The Jaws for Windows support list. Subject: bluetooth and the focus The other reason I want to get away from qwerty based solutions for things like Control Keys, is I want to be able to use the built-in bluetooth wireless from across the room with the Focus 40 display. I sent a message to Freedom but have no answer so far, so I'll ask here, Sorry if this is too far from the main forum topic, but does anyone have experience with setting up bluetooth on one of these? I thought this computer had bluetooth, but the list comes up and shows no devices, and I can see the Focus Display on other machines, so I know the Focus keyboard has bluetooth active. I assume I will need to buy a bluetooth to USB adaptor for the computer and wonder who else may be using one and can confirm that a particular model gets along well with the Focus 40 Blue. If anyone knows of a forum more suited to Focus displays, I'll check there too, but it seems like these things mainly work with JAWS, or at least they are generally used with it on PC's so this is the only place I can think to check. Thanks again! _______________________________________________ Jfw mailing list Jfw@lists.the-jdh.com http://lists.the-jdh.com/mailman/listinfo/jfw_lists.the-jdh.com
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