Locked Re: This is the moderator speaking: Question Regarding Eloquence for NVDA from Code Factory
Rosemarie Chavarria
Hi, Peter,
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I'm not saying that people have to drive around in cars that are ten years old. All I'm saying is that eventually a person has to adjust to change even though it's hard. A friend of mine upgraded to windows 7 last year. She got her computer from a place in Texas called Computers for the Blind and it has windows 7 on it. I think she only paid over a hundred dollars for it. If she had to buy it from a computer store, it would have been more expensive and she wouldn't have been able to afford it. I do understand that not everybody can go out and buy the latest and the greatest at a store but there are ways to get a computer through a place like Computers for the Blind. Rosemarie -----Original Message-----
From: Peter Beasley [mailto:pjbeasley23@...] Sent: Tuesday, April 19, 2016 1:58 AM To: nvda@groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] This is the moderator speaking: Question Regarding Eloquence for NVDA from Code Factory Does this mean then that noone should be driving aroud in cars that are 10 years old. -----Original Message----- From: Rosemarie Chavarria Sent: Monday, April 18, 2016 11:03 PM To: nvda@groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] This is the moderator speaking: Question Regarding Eloquence for NVDA from Code Factory Hi, Brian, You bring up some very good points here. I was talking to a friend the other day and he said he wishes he could go back to windows XP. I asked him why and his answer was that it was simpler to work with. He's a great example of someone who wants to stay in the stone age so to speak. I tried to suggest that he upgrades to windows 10 but he doesn't want to. Like the old saying goes, you can lead a horse to water but you can't make him drink. Rosemarie -----Original Message----- From: Brian Vogel [mailto:britechguy@...] Sent: Monday, April 18, 2016 11:23 AM To: nvda@groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] This is the moderator speaking: Question Regarding Eloquence for NVDA from Code Factory Pete wrote, "It's kind of like the whole e-mail thing with people wanting to use outlook express except people keep telling them to use Thunderbird or Microsoft outlook or window live mail or some thing like that." This isn't a "freedom of choice" issue, it's a simple fact of life that certain programs, Outlook Express being one example, effectively cease to exist when official support ends. No one is guaranteed, nor should they expect, that anything that they're using will be available in perpetuity. I discourage people from using Outlook Express because the only existing versions available are hacks based on who knows what code base and with what vulnerabilities. Since e-mail clients constantly interact with the internet this is a real concern. While such a concern is not present regarding voice synthesis, things will come, and go, in that arena as well. There is very likely going to come a point where you, for any you, have to let go of something you're used to because it is not being supported or carried forward. Getting used to this, even though it's painful, is essential in the cyber world unless you want to drive yourself crazy. I've seen a lot of people over the years who have expended far more energy trying to hold on to something than would have been expended to learn the new that's available to them. Brian |
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