Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Not to split hairs, but it's a new tab (which loads faster AFAIK) not a new window.
It still saves you a keystroke per search - assuming you want the search results in a new tab. Also, if you accidnetally search from the wrong tab it helps loads.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 3:29 PM, Gene <gsasner@...> wrote:
I just checked. Typing an address and then
using alt enter does open the page in a new window. It does this in a
search or when typing an address. It's a nice convenience, but it doesn't
make much difference since, as I said before, you can use control n to open a
new window first, then open a page.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 9:11 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
I had thought, when I read about what alt enter
does in a previous message, that it would do the same thing if you type an
address. I see from Brian's message that alt enter evidently only does
this when in a list of results from a search that you see by doing a search
using that field. It should take this action when searching for a book
mark in this way as well because you are in the same search list. But it
would be good if someone who uses the feature would clarify the
points.
I say, off an on, never to assume in unfamiliar
contexts or environments when dealing with computers. I assumed what would
happen when typing an address and not being in the list and that assumption may
well be wrong. Experimentation is fine, but you can't assume in an
unfamiliar context when dealing with computers.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 8:54 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
I'm not sure Firefox informs you when a popup has
been blocked. I don't recall seeing such messages. You can never
assume anything in unfamiliar environments. I don't use Chrome enough to
know if message information isn't automatically read. But taking the
same action repeatedly, time after time, in any context dealing with computers
accomplishes nothing in general. It assumes that computers are illogical
and that repeating the same failed action many times will produce a different
result. If two or three times doesn't accomplish anything,
repetition further is very unlikely to. Repeating something a time or two
may produce results because some transient condition may prevent the command
from being carried out.
But the first question is, are status messages not
read in Chrome and to answer that question, we need to know what actions produce
them, then test by taking those specific actions.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 7:06 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
And if you use Microsoft Edge or FireFox, you're immediately informed via a
notification bar message that a file has been queued and if you wish to "Run" or
"Save" it. NVDA automatically reads these messages with no problems.
OK, so you use the Download Manager to monitor if a download has started in
Chrome. What do you do to know if a pop-up was blocked on a page, and you're
clicking the link over and over again not knowing what the hell is going on?
Maybe if NVDA read the dynamic message informing you that a popup was blocked,
then you could take an "Action" to disable the blocker for that page?
So my problem deals with NVDA not automatically reading any dynamic content
displayed in this Chrome Actions bar.
On 5/15/2018 4:20 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi
Kenny,
I’m not aware that
downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe this should be a Chrome
change.
However, it’s easy
enough for me to press Control-J and go look at the percentages. Once
it’s in focus, it should be read to you.
All the
best
Steve
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when
they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with
the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download
has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to check.
Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome
browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to activate
for the download progress for Chrome too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt
wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the
notifications.
All the
best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being pushed
to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The
alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore
wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how great Chrome is for
two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be
true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to use
Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the
list.
I have done this around ten times on all the lists, but
you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome
is.
Just read works great for just reading an article on
the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the downloads.
Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager, and you can
arrange them in different folders and back them up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media.
Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are
finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6,
2018 5:23 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re:
[nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore
now
I use the add on called sound on for navigational
sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the
annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are
finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the
ticks in the old version due to navigational sounds.
Until i find a browser with this function of sound I'm
loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've been
reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and
tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever they
are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you need
to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are hugely
slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi processor
devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that
Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its
not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or
that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to do,
as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey, that is
their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian
Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in which I
expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this
point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they
may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical changes,
I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I haven't tested it
for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses. I will therefore
only address general browsing and the interface. Others may want to
comment on other aspects I haven't compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit of
discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the subject
find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior for general
browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main browser.
There are various considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind
and what you may want to consider. You may have other or different
considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for general browsing
is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may want to
compare and see if the difference is important to you. There is a
very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with Firefox
for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a slow machine
running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had expected that, if
Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable difference, even
though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that
amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast
machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on that
Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in speed on
my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would have been
on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed is
the reason I say it's better for general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or
Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is
different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional
material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not want
or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may benefit
in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the differences in
the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as
settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f,
that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and
there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open
from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need to know that
the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following
way:
It's a web page-like interface but there some controls
that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two buttons
today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know
what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate
the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because forms mode
may not have been properly calibrated with browse mode in that interface,
at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed to
be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment more to
know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether that
was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search feature in
settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was
that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with as
Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I
follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say more
or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see that it
works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play
with it more before saying just how well it works. It' appears to
work well from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the
address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to find such as
york times or new york times and you can up and down arrow through
results. Some of them will be search results using a search engine
but the top results in the list should be from book marks and
history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if that
contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature more
than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this would
eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other words,
this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in
Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you consider
important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which browser
you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not learning
a new interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of
course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to have pages
load a good deal faster, but the importance of speed may vary from user to
user. But if you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish
to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly identical
between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual PC
cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then
opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the address
bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are
automatically placed on the address bar, but you can check. If you
want to make sure, it takes almost no time to execute control
l.
I hope those who are interested in this subject find
these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or
another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge at
all so I don't know how Edge compares.
Gene
|
|
Re: A tutorial for MP3 Direct Cut
Brian's Mail list account
I think I've got Lame in so many places now I've lost track! The snag is which is the newest? Brian
bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message ----- From: "Gene" <gsasner@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 2:57 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] A tutorial for MP3 Direct Cut Regarding my last message, if you want to use Audacity, there is an error in the tutorial which I'll explain if you want to know. The error won't cause problems, it just adds an unnecessary step or two when editing. You may save time without doing it. Also, if you just want to edit and not record with MP3 direct Cut, you may not need the lame encoder to be placed in the program Gene ----- Original Message ----- From: Gene Sent: Monday, May 14, 2018 8:40 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: A tutorial for MP3 Direct Cut Recently, I said I would send a tutorial about using MP3 Direct Cut to an e-mail list. I don't recall if this was the list but, because I don't remember, I'm sending it here. The presentation is one file and contains a discussion and demonstration of both audacity and MP3 Direct Cut. You can skim the file until the MP3 Direct cut part begins. After the MP3 Direct Cut section, is a discussion on how to decide what parameters to use to record a file, such as bit rate. You can listen or download it here: http://www.accessibleworld.org/sites/default/files/tt-03-19-12-tutorial-gene-asner-audacity-and-mp3-cut.mp3Gene
|
|
Re: Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
It saves as much time as you do web searches. Me: I do them lots, so it saves me a ton of time.
You are right though, you can (for the sake of an extra keystroke) open a new tab with control t (new windows oepn slower) and then do your search.
HTH,
CHris
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 2:34 PM, Gene <gsasner@...> wrote:
Usually, if you go to the address bar and type an
address or a search and open a new page, it will open in the same
window. Alt enter, according to the message, I haven't tried it, opens the
new page in a new window so you now have two Windows opened. This saves a
small amount of time but it makes little difference. You can accomplish
the same thing in any standard Windows browser by using the command
control n when you are on a web page, to open a new browser window and
opening a page however you want in that window, typing an address, a search,
history, a bookmark from the list or using the address bar to find it. You
are in a new browser window so you can do anything you can do in any browser
window.
Gene.
----- Original Message -----
In the original message, typing a search is done
instead of typing a web address but alt enter should do the same thing, no
matter how you open a new web page.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 6:14 AM
Subject: Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Wow thanks for this keystroke! I'm starting to love Chrome as
wel! but I didn't grasp what's used for. could you maybe give an example? yes I
understanding it's for searching, but not as clearly as I'like. I'm sure this
keystroke will become one of my main ones!
El 15/05/2018 a las 01:39 a.m., Chris Norman via
Groups.Io escribió:
Hi,
When the downloads window is open you do get the progress sound.
I've been using Chrome as my default browser for a while now, and have just
bought a Chromebook to boot. I love both.
One of the coolest shortcuts i've found in Chrome is alt enter: With a page
open you navigate to the omnibar (the address bar) and type a search. When you
press alt enter it opens what you just searched for in a new tab without you
having to close your current web page.
Needless to say I am a Chrome convert.
It also works extremely well with my Mindspace
Client, far better than Firefox did when I tried it last (about a month ago).
Mindspace involves lots of multilayered sounds and lots of dynamic page
creation with JavaScript which Chrome's V8 JavaScript engine handles with
ease, far Faster than Firefox's SpiderMonkey I think it's called.
While the above was of course a shameless plug, if you do decide to have a
look at Mindspace please be aware that it is pre-alpha, and as such isn't
anywhere near complete.
HTH,
Chris
On 15/05/2018 02:01, Kenny wrote:
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when
they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with
the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download
has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to
check. Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome
browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to
activate for the download progress for Chrome too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the
notifications.
All the
best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being
pushed to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by
NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The
alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore
wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how great Chrome is
for two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be
true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to
use Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the
list.
I have done this around ten times on all the lists,
but you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome
is.
Just read works great for just reading an article on
the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the
downloads. Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager,
and you can arrange them in different folders and back them
up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media.
Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are
finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan
gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 5:23 PM To:
nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re:
[nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore
now
I use the add on called sound on for navigational
sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind
about Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the
annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are
finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the
ticks in the old version due to navigational
sounds.
Until i find a browser with this function of sound
I'm loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've
been reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of
Firefox and tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever
they are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you
need to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are
hugely slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi
processor devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you
might find that Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading
times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its
not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or
that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to
do, as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey,
that is their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian
Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in which I
expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this
point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they
may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical
changes, I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I
haven't tested it for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses.
I will therefore only address general browsing and the interface.
Others may want to comment on other aspects I haven't
compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit
of discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the
subject find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior for general
browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main
browser. There are various considerations. I'll explain why
I changed my mind and what you may want to consider. You may have
other or different considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for general
browsing is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may
want to compare and see if the difference is important to you.
There is a very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome
with Firefox for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a
slow machine running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had
expected that, if Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable
difference, even though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a
difference that amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast
machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on
that Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in
speed on my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would
have been on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed
is the reason I say it's better for general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or
Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is
different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional
material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not
want or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may
benefit in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the differences
in the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as
settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt
f, that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus
and there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open
from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need to know that
the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following
way:
It's a web page-like interface but there some
controls that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two
buttons today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I
don't know what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode,
and activate the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button
because forms mode may not have been properly calibrated with browse
mode in that interface, at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed
to be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment
more to know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of
whether that was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search feature in
settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was
that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with
as Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I
follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say
more or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see
that it works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd
want to play with it more before saying just how well it works.
It' appears to work well from the very little testing I've done.
If you are in the address bar, you can type some or all of what you want
to find such as york times or new york times and you can up and down
arrow through results. Some of them will be search results using a
search engine but the top results in the list should be from book marks
and history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if
that contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature
more than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this
would eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other
words, this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as
in Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you consider
important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which
browser you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not
learning a new interface and continuing to use the familiar
Firefox. You, of course, can determine questions like that.
It's nice to have pages load a good deal faster, but the importance of
speed may vary from user to user. But if you haven't compared with
a hands on test, you may wish to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly identical
between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual
PC cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then
opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the
address bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome,
you are automatically placed on the address bar, but you can
check. If you want to make sure, it takes almost no time to
execute control l.
I hope those who are interested in this subject find
these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or
another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge
at all so I don't know how Edge compares.
Gene
--
Gera
Enviado desde Thunderbird
|
|
Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
I just checked. Typing an address and then
using alt enter does open the page in a new window. It does this in a
search or when typing an address. It's a nice convenience, but it doesn't
make much difference since, as I said before, you can use control n to open a
new window first, then open a page.
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 9:11 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
I had thought, when I read about what alt enter
does in a previous message, that it would do the same thing if you type an
address. I see from Brian's message that alt enter evidently only does
this when in a list of results from a search that you see by doing a search
using that field. It should take this action when searching for a book
mark in this way as well because you are in the same search list. But it
would be good if someone who uses the feature would clarify the
points.
I say, off an on, never to assume in unfamiliar
contexts or environments when dealing with computers. I assumed what would
happen when typing an address and not being in the list and that assumption may
well be wrong. Experimentation is fine, but you can't assume in an
unfamiliar context when dealing with computers.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 8:54 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
I'm not sure Firefox informs you when a popup has
been blocked. I don't recall seeing such messages. You can never
assume anything in unfamiliar environments. I don't use Chrome enough to
know if message information isn't automatically read. But taking the
same action repeatedly, time after time, in any context dealing with computers
accomplishes nothing in general. It assumes that computers are illogical
and that repeating the same failed action many times will produce a different
result. If two or three times doesn't accomplish anything,
repetition further is very unlikely to. Repeating something a time or two
may produce results because some transient condition may prevent the command
from being carried out.
But the first question is, are status messages not
read in Chrome and to answer that question, we need to know what actions produce
them, then test by taking those specific actions.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 7:06 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
And if you use Microsoft Edge or FireFox, you're immediately informed via a
notification bar message that a file has been queued and if you wish to "Run" or
"Save" it. NVDA automatically reads these messages with no problems.
OK, so you use the Download Manager to monitor if a download has started in
Chrome. What do you do to know if a pop-up was blocked on a page, and you're
clicking the link over and over again not knowing what the hell is going on?
Maybe if NVDA read the dynamic message informing you that a popup was blocked,
then you could take an "Action" to disable the blocker for that page?
So my problem deals with NVDA not automatically reading any dynamic content
displayed in this Chrome Actions bar.
On 5/15/2018 4:20 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi
Kenny,
I’m not aware that
downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe this should be a Chrome
change.
However, it’s easy
enough for me to press Control-J and go look at the percentages. Once
it’s in focus, it should be read to you.
All the
best
Steve
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when
they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with
the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download
has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to check.
Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome
browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to activate
for the download progress for Chrome too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt
wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the
notifications.
All the
best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being pushed
to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The
alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore
wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how great Chrome is for
two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be
true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to use
Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the
list.
I have done this around ten times on all the lists, but
you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome
is.
Just read works great for just reading an article on
the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the downloads.
Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager, and you can
arrange them in different folders and back them up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media.
Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are
finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6,
2018 5:23 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re:
[nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore
now
I use the add on called sound on for navigational
sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the
annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are
finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the
ticks in the old version due to navigational sounds.
Until i find a browser with this function of sound I'm
loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've been
reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and
tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever they
are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you need
to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are hugely
slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi processor
devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that
Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its
not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or
that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to do,
as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey, that is
their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian
Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in which I
expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this
point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they
may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical changes,
I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I haven't tested it
for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses. I will therefore
only address general browsing and the interface. Others may want to
comment on other aspects I haven't compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit of
discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the subject
find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior for general
browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main browser.
There are various considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind
and what you may want to consider. You may have other or different
considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for general browsing
is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may want to
compare and see if the difference is important to you. There is a
very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with Firefox
for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a slow machine
running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had expected that, if
Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable difference, even
though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that
amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast
machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on that
Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in speed on
my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would have been
on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed is
the reason I say it's better for general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or
Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is
different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional
material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not want
or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may benefit
in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the differences in
the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as
settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f,
that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and
there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open
from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need to know that
the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following
way:
It's a web page-like interface but there some controls
that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two buttons
today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know
what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate
the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because forms mode
may not have been properly calibrated with browse mode in that interface,
at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed to
be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment more to
know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether that
was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search feature in
settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was
that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with as
Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I
follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say more
or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see that it
works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play
with it more before saying just how well it works. It' appears to
work well from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the
address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to find such as
york times or new york times and you can up and down arrow through
results. Some of them will be search results using a search engine
but the top results in the list should be from book marks and
history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if that
contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature more
than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this would
eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other words,
this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in
Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you consider
important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which browser
you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not learning
a new interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of
course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to have pages
load a good deal faster, but the importance of speed may vary from user to
user. But if you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish
to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly identical
between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual PC
cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then
opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the address
bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are
automatically placed on the address bar, but you can check. If you
want to make sure, it takes almost no time to execute control
l.
I hope those who are interested in this subject find
these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or
another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge at
all so I don't know how Edge compares.
Gene
|
|
Re: Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA
Brian's Mail list account
There do seem to be a number of rough edges in the add ons and other bits and bobs in the user guide to iron out and then you will get an RC to break, erm test!
Brian
bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message ----- From: "Rosemarie Chavarria" <knitqueen2007@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 4:39 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA Oh, I see. My mistake.
On 5/14/2018 8:38 PM, Joseph Lee wrote:
Hi, Likely June. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Rosemarie Chavarria Sent: Monday, May 14, 2018 8:38 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA
Probably sometime next week.
On 5/14/2018 7:31 PM, Jessica D wrote:
Hi, When will NVDA 2018.2 be available?
Thanks, Jessica
On May 14, 2018, at 8:15 PM, Joseph Lee <joseph.lee22590@...> wrote:
Hi, Can you tell your client the following: BrailleNote Touch will be supported again in NVDA 2018.2. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Jackie Sent: Monday, May 14, 2018 3:17 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA
A client is trying to use her BrailleNote Touch as a display w/NVDA over bluetooth. It used to be that it worked w/the brailliant option, though in the latest NVDA version, that isn't even available in the Braille settings. Any reason it disappeared? We've tried using the Baum/HumanWare/Orbit/APH & also the Braille Note setting, to no avail.
-- Remember! Friends Help Friends Be Cybersafe Jackie McBride Helping Cybercrime Victims 1 Person at a Time https://brighter-vision.com
|
|
Re: Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA
Brian's Mail list account
Does this mean if the client uses the master snap it will work then? Brian
bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message ----- From: "Joseph Lee" <joseph.lee22590@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 1:15 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA Hi, Can you tell your client the following: BrailleNote Touch will be supported again in NVDA 2018.2. Cheers, Joseph -----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Jackie Sent: Monday, May 14, 2018 3:17 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Using BrailleNote touch as a display w/NVDA A client is trying to use her BrailleNote Touch as a display w/NVDA over bluetooth. It used to be that it worked w/the brailliant option, though in the latest NVDA version, that isn't even available in the Braille settings. Any reason it disappeared? We've tried using the Baum/HumanWare/Orbit/APH & also the Braille Note setting, to no avail. -- Remember! Friends Help Friends Be Cybersafe Jackie McBride Helping Cybercrime Victims 1 Person at a Time https://brighter-vision.com
|
|
screenwriting software that works with NVDA

Giles Turnbull
Hi all,
has anybody used screenwriting programs successfully with NVDA? When I start my MA in creative writing in October I'd like to take the movie/TV screenwriting module, but am going to need to use software to handle the routine screenwriting formatting. I'd appreciate any suggestions on which software works well with NVDA and any that doesn't.
Grateful for any suggestions ... I know what software is available but do not know anybody who has used them with a screen reader :)
Giles
|
|
Re: NVDA master snapshot and vs2017 don't work well at this stage.
Brian's Mail list account
I don't know about visual studio, but certainly some odd things are going on on some web pages which I put down to quirky web sites. Brian
bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message ----- From: "Jaffar Sidek" <jaffar.sidek10@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 10:34 AM Subject: [nvda] NVDA master snapshot and vs2017 don't work well at this stage. Hi. I am bringing this up so that when NVDA 18.2 comes out, the visual studio's 2017 accessibility with NVDA will still be maintained. One bug that I have noticed is that when I try to include or libraries that I need for my project from other frameworks or development tools through the property manager for C or C++ development, NVDA won't allow you to type in the edit box that matters. Pressing the keys will just produce a beep sound, just as in Read Only edit boxes. I have the visual studio addon installed and I don't know if it is messing up with NVDA's ability to access visual studio on it's own. Clarification is needed here. Also, NVDA tends to say previous items on a list or combo box before you land on the next one. For example, if the first item is "Help" and the second item is "Go",the arrow down key is pressed to go to the next item, NVDA will repeat the first item on the list, then say the second item, as in "Help", "Go", this is especially true for Intellisense which has numerous possibilities, which cuts down on productivity. I hope I am making myself clear here. Cheers!
|
|
Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
I had thought, when I read about what alt enter
does in a previous message, that it would do the same thing if you type an
address. I see from Brian's message that alt enter evidently only does
this when in a list of results from a search that you see by doing a search
using that field. It should take this action when searching for a book
mark in this way as well because you are in the same search list. But it
would be good if someone who uses the feature would clarify the
points.
I say, off an on, never to assume in unfamiliar
contexts or environments when dealing with computers. I assumed what would
happen when typing an address and not being in the list and that assumption may
well be wrong. Experimentation is fine, but you can't assume in an
unfamiliar context when dealing with computers.
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 8:54 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
I'm not sure Firefox informs you when a popup has
been blocked. I don't recall seeing such messages. You can never
assume anything in unfamiliar environments. I don't use Chrome enough to
know if message information isn't automatically read. But taking the
same action repeatedly, time after time, in any context dealing with computers
accomplishes nothing in general. It assumes that computers are illogical
and that repeating the same failed action many times will produce a different
result. If two or three times doesn't accomplish anything,
repetition further is very unlikely to. Repeating something a time or two
may produce results because some transient condition may prevent the command
from being carried out.
But the first question is, are status messages not
read in Chrome and to answer that question, we need to know what actions produce
them, then test by taking those specific actions.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 7:06 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
And if you use Microsoft Edge or FireFox, you're immediately informed via a
notification bar message that a file has been queued and if you wish to "Run" or
"Save" it. NVDA automatically reads these messages with no problems.
OK, so you use the Download Manager to monitor if a download has started in
Chrome. What do you do to know if a pop-up was blocked on a page, and you're
clicking the link over and over again not knowing what the hell is going on?
Maybe if NVDA read the dynamic message informing you that a popup was blocked,
then you could take an "Action" to disable the blocker for that page?
So my problem deals with NVDA not automatically reading any dynamic content
displayed in this Chrome Actions bar.
On 5/15/2018 4:20 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi
Kenny,
I’m not aware that
downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe this should be a Chrome
change.
However, it’s easy
enough for me to press Control-J and go look at the percentages. Once
it’s in focus, it should be read to you.
All the
best
Steve
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when
they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with
the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download
has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to check.
Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome
browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to activate
for the download progress for Chrome too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt
wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the
notifications.
All the
best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being pushed
to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The
alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore
wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how great Chrome is for
two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be
true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to use
Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the
list.
I have done this around ten times on all the lists, but
you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome
is.
Just read works great for just reading an article on
the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the downloads.
Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager, and you can
arrange them in different folders and back them up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media.
Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are
finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6,
2018 5:23 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re:
[nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore
now
I use the add on called sound on for navigational
sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the
annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are
finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the
ticks in the old version due to navigational sounds.
Until i find a browser with this function of sound I'm
loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've been
reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and
tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever they
are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you need
to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are hugely
slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi processor
devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that
Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its
not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or
that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to do,
as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey, that is
their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian
Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in which I
expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this
point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they
may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical changes,
I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I haven't tested it
for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses. I will therefore
only address general browsing and the interface. Others may want to
comment on other aspects I haven't compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit of
discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the subject
find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior for general
browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main browser.
There are various considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind
and what you may want to consider. You may have other or different
considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for general browsing
is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may want to
compare and see if the difference is important to you. There is a
very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with Firefox
for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a slow machine
running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had expected that, if
Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable difference, even
though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that
amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast
machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on that
Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in speed on
my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would have been
on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed is
the reason I say it's better for general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or
Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is
different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional
material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not want
or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may benefit
in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the differences in
the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as
settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f,
that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and
there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open
from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need to know that
the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following
way:
It's a web page-like interface but there some controls
that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two buttons
today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know
what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate
the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because forms mode
may not have been properly calibrated with browse mode in that interface,
at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed to
be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment more to
know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether that
was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search feature in
settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was
that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with as
Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I
follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say more
or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see that it
works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play
with it more before saying just how well it works. It' appears to
work well from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the
address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to find such as
york times or new york times and you can up and down arrow through
results. Some of them will be search results using a search engine
but the top results in the list should be from book marks and
history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if that
contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature more
than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this would
eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other words,
this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in
Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you consider
important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which browser
you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not learning
a new interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of
course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to have pages
load a good deal faster, but the importance of speed may vary from user to
user. But if you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish
to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly identical
between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual PC
cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then
opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the address
bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are
automatically placed on the address bar, but you can check. If you
want to make sure, it takes almost no time to execute control
l.
I hope those who are interested in this subject find
these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or
another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge at
all so I don't know how Edge compares.
Gene
|
|
Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
I'm not sure Firefox informs you when a popup has
been blocked. I don't recall seeing such messages. You can never
assume anything in unfamiliar environments. I don't use Chrome enough to
know if message information isn't automatically read. But taking the
same action repeatedly, time after time, in any context dealing with computers
accomplishes nothing in general. It assumes that computers are illogical
and that repeating the same failed action many times will produce a different
result. If two or three times doesn't accomplish anything,
repetition further is very unlikely to. Repeating something a time or two
may produce results because some transient condition may prevent the command
from being carried out.
But the first question is, are status messages not
read in Chrome and to answer that question, we need to know what actions produce
them, then test by taking those specific actions.
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 7:06 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I
like it muchmore now
And if you use Microsoft Edge or FireFox, you're immediately informed via a
notification bar message that a file has been queued and if you wish to "Run" or
"Save" it. NVDA automatically reads these messages with no problems.
OK, so you use the Download Manager to monitor if a download has started in
Chrome. What do you do to know if a pop-up was blocked on a page, and you're
clicking the link over and over again not knowing what the hell is going on?
Maybe if NVDA read the dynamic message informing you that a popup was blocked,
then you could take an "Action" to disable the blocker for that page?
So my problem deals with NVDA not automatically reading any dynamic content
displayed in this Chrome Actions bar.
On 5/15/2018 4:20 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi
Kenny,
I’m not aware that
downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe this should be a Chrome
change.
However, it’s easy
enough for me to press Control-J and go look at the percentages. Once
it’s in focus, it should be read to you.
All the
best
Steve
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when
they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with
the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download
has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to check.
Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome
browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to activate
for the download progress for Chrome too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt
wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the
notifications.
All the
best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being pushed
to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The
alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore
wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how great Chrome is for
two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be
true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to use
Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the
list.
I have done this around ten times on all the lists, but
you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome
is.
Just read works great for just reading an article on
the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the downloads.
Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager, and you can
arrange them in different folders and back them up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media.
Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are
finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6,
2018 5:23 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re:
[nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore
now
I use the add on called sound on for navigational
sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the
annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are
finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the
ticks in the old version due to navigational sounds.
Until i find a browser with this function of sound I'm
loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've been
reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and
tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever they
are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you need
to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are hugely
slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi processor
devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that
Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its
not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or
that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to do,
as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey, that is
their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian
Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in which I
expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this
point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they
may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical changes,
I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I haven't tested it
for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses. I will therefore
only address general browsing and the interface. Others may want to
comment on other aspects I haven't compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit of
discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the subject
find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior for general
browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main browser.
There are various considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind
and what you may want to consider. You may have other or different
considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for general browsing
is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may want to
compare and see if the difference is important to you. There is a
very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with Firefox
for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a slow machine
running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had expected that, if
Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable difference, even
though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that
amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast
machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on that
Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in speed on
my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would have been
on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed is
the reason I say it's better for general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or
Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is
different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional
material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not want
or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may benefit
in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the differences in
the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as
settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f,
that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and
there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open
from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need to know that
the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following
way:
It's a web page-like interface but there some controls
that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two buttons
today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know
what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate
the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because forms mode
may not have been properly calibrated with browse mode in that interface,
at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed to
be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment more to
know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether that
was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search feature in
settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was
that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with as
Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I
follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say more
or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see that it
works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play
with it more before saying just how well it works. It' appears to
work well from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the
address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to find such as
york times or new york times and you can up and down arrow through
results. Some of them will be search results using a search engine
but the top results in the list should be from book marks and
history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if that
contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature more
than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this would
eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other words,
this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in
Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you consider
important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which browser
you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not learning
a new interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of
course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to have pages
load a good deal faster, but the importance of speed may vary from user to
user. But if you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish
to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly identical
between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual PC
cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then
opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the address
bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are
automatically placed on the address bar, but you can check. If you
want to make sure, it takes almost no time to execute control
l.
I hope those who are interested in this subject find
these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or
another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge at
all so I don't know how Edge compares.
Gene
|
|
Re: Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
OH OK thanks for the clarification! I'll definitely give it a go!
El 15/05/2018 a las 08:26 a.m., Brian
Vogel escribió:
If you use the
omnibar (since it's now allowed to be used for entering search
criteria for your chosen default search engine, it's no longer the
web address edit box) to enter criteria for a search, hitting
"ALT+Enter" will cause those results to be opened in a separate
tab.
If you just hit Enter they will open in the current tab, knocking
out whatever you were already looking at in that tab.
By the way, this is also true in Firefox as well.
--
Brian - Windows 10 Home, 64-Bit, Version
1803, Build 17134
After
all, a democracy based solely on the values of the majority,
with no overriding ethical principles and processes, is
nothing more than clubhouse democracy, great for those on the
inside and a tyranny for those who fail to see eye to eye with
the majority.
~ Paul Noeldner, May
16, 2007
--
Gera
Enviado desde Thunderbird
|
|
Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Hi, So go into Chrome Settings, and, in Downloads, set Chrome to Ask Every Time. Then you’ll get the same effect. All the best Steve
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Kenny Sent: 15 May 2018 13:07 To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now And if you use Microsoft Edge or FireFox, you're immediately informed via a notification bar message that a file has been queued and if you wish to "Run" or "Save" it. NVDA automatically reads these messages with no problems. OK, so you use the Download Manager to monitor if a download has started in Chrome. What do you do to know if a pop-up was blocked on a page, and you're clicking the link over and over again not knowing what the hell is going on? Maybe if NVDA read the dynamic message informing you that a popup was blocked, then you could take an "Action" to disable the blocker for that page? So my problem deals with NVDA not automatically reading any dynamic content displayed in this Chrome Actions bar. On 5/15/2018 4:20 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi Kenny, I’m not aware that downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe this should be a Chrome change. However, it’s easy enough for me to press Control-J and go look at the percentages. Once it’s in focus, it should be read to you. All the best Steve
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut. I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with the browser. You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to check. Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome browser. Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to activate for the download progress for Chrome too? On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi, Alt+Shif t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the notifications. All the best Steve Can you please share your tutorial with the list again? I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being pushed to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by NVDA? Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks. On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore wrote:
Hi all! I have been telling people just how great Chrome is for two and a half years. I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be true. If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to use Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the list. I have done this around ten times on all the lists, but you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome is. Just read works great for just reading an article on the page. CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the downloads. Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager, and you can arrange them in different folders and back them up. Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media. Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing. Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are finally getting used to Chrome! David Moore Sent from Mail for Windows 10 From: juan gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 5:23 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now I use the add on called sound on for navigational sounds. -----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the ticks in the old version due to navigational sounds. Until i find a browser with this function of sound I'm loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've been reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever they are. On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you need to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are hugely slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi processor devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times. Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or that then you can come back. To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to do, as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey, that is their business. Brian bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gene" <gsasner@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now I may have sent messages in the past in which I expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical changes, I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I haven't tested it for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses. I will therefore only address general browsing and the interface. Others may want to comment on other aspects I haven't compared. This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit of discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the subject find it useful. If you try Chrome and find it superior for general browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main browser. There are various considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind and what you may want to consider. You may have other or different considerations as well. The reason I say Chrome is better for general browsing is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may want to compare and see if the difference is important to you. There is a very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with Firefox for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a slow machine running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had expected that, if Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable difference, even though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that amounted to anything. I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on that Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in speed on my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would have been on a fast XP machine. I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed is the reason I say it's better for general browsing. The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not want or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may benefit in early learning by using material. The main things to know in terms of the differences in the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f, that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and there are also items that open like web pages such as settings. I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open from the main menu. But if you work with settings, you need to know that the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following way: It's a web page-like interface but there some controls that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two buttons today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because forms mode may not have been properly calibrated with browse mode in that interface, at least at times. I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed to be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment more to know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether that was necessary. There's a very useful settings search feature in settings. One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with as Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say more or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see that it works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play with it more before saying just how well it works. It' appears to work well from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to find such as york times or new york times and you can up and down arrow through results. Some of them will be search results using a search engine but the top results in the list should be from book marks and history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if that contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature more than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this would eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other words, this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in Firefox. If you use Firefox extensions that you consider important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which browser you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not learning a new interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to have pages load a good deal faster, but the importance of speed may vary from user to user. But if you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish to. Browsing is either identical or nearly identical between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual PC cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing. So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the address bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are automatically placed on the address bar, but you can check. If you want to make sure, it takes almost no time to execute control l. I hope those who are interested in this subject find these comments useful. If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge at all so I don't know how Edge compares. Gene
|
|
Re: Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Usually, if you go to the address bar and type an
address or a search and open a new page, it will open in the same
window. Alt enter, according to the message, I haven't tried it, opens the
new page in a new window so you now have two Windows opened. This saves a
small amount of time but it makes little difference. You can accomplish
the same thing in any standard Windows browser by using the command
control n when you are on a web page, to open a new browser window and
opening a page however you want in that window, typing an address, a search,
history, a bookmark from the list or using the address bar to find it. You
are in a new browser window so you can do anything you can do in any browser
window.
Gene.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
----- Original Message -----
In the original message, typing a search is done
instead of typing a web address but alt enter should do the same thing, no
matter how you open a new web page.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 6:14 AM
Subject: Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Wow thanks for this keystroke! I'm starting to love Chrome as
wel! but I didn't grasp what's used for. could you maybe give an example? yes I
understanding it's for searching, but not as clearly as I'like. I'm sure this
keystroke will become one of my main ones!
El 15/05/2018 a las 01:39 a.m., Chris Norman via
Groups.Io escribió:
Hi,
When the downloads window is open you do get the progress sound.
I've been using Chrome as my default browser for a while now, and have just
bought a Chromebook to boot. I love both.
One of the coolest shortcuts i've found in Chrome is alt enter: With a page
open you navigate to the omnibar (the address bar) and type a search. When you
press alt enter it opens what you just searched for in a new tab without you
having to close your current web page.
Needless to say I am a Chrome convert.
It also works extremely well with my Mindspace
Client, far better than Firefox did when I tried it last (about a month ago).
Mindspace involves lots of multilayered sounds and lots of dynamic page
creation with JavaScript which Chrome's V8 JavaScript engine handles with
ease, far Faster than Firefox's SpiderMonkey I think it's called.
While the above was of course a shameless plug, if you do decide to have a
look at Mindspace please be aware that it is pre-alpha, and as such isn't
anywhere near complete.
HTH,
Chris
On 15/05/2018 02:01, Kenny wrote:
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when
they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with
the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download
has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to
check. Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome
browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to
activate for the download progress for Chrome too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the
notifications.
All the
best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being
pushed to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by
NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The
alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore
wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how great Chrome is
for two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be
true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to
use Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the
list.
I have done this around ten times on all the lists,
but you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome
is.
Just read works great for just reading an article on
the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the
downloads. Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager,
and you can arrange them in different folders and back them
up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media.
Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are
finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan
gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 5:23 PM To:
nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re:
[nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore
now
I use the add on called sound on for navigational
sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind
about Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the
annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are
finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the
ticks in the old version due to navigational
sounds.
Until i find a browser with this function of sound
I'm loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've
been reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of
Firefox and tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever
they are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you
need to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are
hugely slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi
processor devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you
might find that Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading
times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its
not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or
that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to
do, as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey,
that is their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@..., putting 'Brian
Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about
Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in which I
expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this
point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they
may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical
changes, I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I
haven't tested it for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses.
I will therefore only address general browsing and the interface.
Others may want to comment on other aspects I haven't
compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit
of discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the
subject find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior for general
browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main
browser. There are various considerations. I'll explain why
I changed my mind and what you may want to consider. You may have
other or different considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for general
browsing is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may
want to compare and see if the difference is important to you.
There is a very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome
with Firefox for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a
slow machine running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had
expected that, if Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable
difference, even though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a
difference that amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast
machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on
that Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in
speed on my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would
have been on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed
is the reason I say it's better for general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or
Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is
different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional
material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not
want or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may
benefit in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the differences
in the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as
settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt
f, that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus
and there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open
from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need to know that
the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following
way:
It's a web page-like interface but there some
controls that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two
buttons today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I
don't know what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode,
and activate the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button
because forms mode may not have been properly calibrated with browse
mode in that interface, at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed
to be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment
more to know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of
whether that was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search feature in
settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was
that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with
as Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I
follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say
more or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see
that it works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd
want to play with it more before saying just how well it works.
It' appears to work well from the very little testing I've done.
If you are in the address bar, you can type some or all of what you want
to find such as york times or new york times and you can up and down
arrow through results. Some of them will be search results using a
search engine but the top results in the list should be from book marks
and history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if
that contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature
more than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this
would eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other
words, this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as
in Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you consider
important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which
browser you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not
learning a new interface and continuing to use the familiar
Firefox. You, of course, can determine questions like that.
It's nice to have pages load a good deal faster, but the importance of
speed may vary from user to user. But if you haven't compared with
a hands on test, you may wish to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly identical
between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual
PC cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then
opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the
address bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome,
you are automatically placed on the address bar, but you can
check. If you want to make sure, it takes almost no time to
execute control l.
I hope those who are interested in this subject find
these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or
another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge
at all so I don't know how Edge compares.
Gene
--
Gera
Enviado desde Thunderbird
|
|
Re: Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
If you use the omnibar (since it's now allowed to be used for entering search criteria for your chosen default search engine, it's no longer the web address edit box) to enter criteria for a search, hitting "ALT+Enter" will cause those results to be opened in a separate tab. If you just hit Enter they will open in the current tab, knocking out whatever you were already looking at in that tab. By the way, this is also true in Firefox as well. --
Brian - Windows 10 Home, 64-Bit, Version 1803, Build 17134
After all, a democracy based solely on the values of the majority, with no overriding ethical principles and processes, is nothing more than clubhouse democracy, great for those on the inside and a tyranny for those who fail to see eye to eye with the majority.
~ Paul Noeldner, May 16, 2007
|
|
Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Kenny <kwashingtonbox@...>
And if you use Microsoft Edge or FireFox, you're immediately
informed via a notification bar message that a file has been
queued and if you wish to "Run" or "Save" it. NVDA automatically
reads these messages with no problems.
OK, so you use the Download Manager to monitor if a download has
started in Chrome. What do you do to know if a pop-up was blocked
on a page, and you're clicking the link over and over again not
knowing what the hell is going on? Maybe if NVDA read the dynamic
message informing you that a popup was blocked, then you could
take an "Action" to disable the blocker for that page?
So my problem deals with NVDA not automatically reading any
dynamic content displayed in this Chrome Actions bar.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 5/15/2018 4:20 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi
Kenny,
I’m not
aware that downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe
this should be a Chrome change.
However,
it’s easy enough for me to press Control-J and go look at
the percentages. Once it’s in focus, it should be read to
you.
All the
best
Steve
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these
"Actions" when they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This
is the only issue I have with the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea
the download has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up
the Download Manager to check. Even other Actions aren't
spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be
configured to activate for the download progress for Chrome
too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which
are the notifications.
All
the best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages
being pushed to Chrome's notification bar automatically read
by NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the
notification bar? The alt+n key combination doesn't seem to
work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how
great Chrome is for two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are
finding it to be true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I
wrote on how to use Chrome, and take you through all
settings, I will paste it on the list.
I have done this around ten times on
all the lists, but you are still finding out for the first
time, just how great Chrome is.
Just read works great for just reading
an article on the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of
the downloads. Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the
bookmarks manager, and you can arrange them in different
folders and back them up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and
streaming media. Chrome is good for a lot other than just
simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am celebrating
that you are finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan gonzalez
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 5:23 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind
about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
I use the add on called sound on for
navigational sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io
<nvda@nvda.groups.io>
On Behalf Of Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely
changed my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds?
one of the annoyances with current firefox is figuring out
when downloads are finished or when a page is refreshing
itself, ie you normally hear the ticks in the old version
due to navigational sounds.
Until i find a browser with this
function of sound I'm loathe to get a new browser over
ff52, but the problem is that I've been reading that some
sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and
tell you so when you have things like modal windows
whatever they are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even
reasonably you need to use a version 45, as after this the
actual load up times are hugely slowed, my guess is that
the code is made for multi processor devices, not single
core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that
Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast on
sites that its not uncommon to see the message you browser
is unsupported get this or that then you can come back.
To me this is a weird thing for
commercial sites to do, as they are, in effect pushing
away potential customers, but hey, that is their business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@...,
putting 'Brian Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my
mind about Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past in
which I expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than
Chrome. At this point, I've changed my mind and, unless
things change over time, as they may as Firefox continues
to implement its new internal technical changes, I
consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I
haven't tested it for uses such as streaming or RSS or
other uses. I will therefore only address general
browsing and the interface. Others may want to comment on
other aspects I haven't compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a
review and a bit of discussion of the interface. I hope
those interested in the subject find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it superior
for general browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome
as your main browser. There are various considerations.
I'll explain why I changed my mind and what you may want
to consider. You may have other or different
considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for
general browsing is because it loads pages faster than
Firefox. You may want to compare and see if the
difference is important to you. There is a very
noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with
Firefox for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a
slow machine running XP perhaps six or eight months ago.
I had expected that, if Chrome was faster, there would
have been a noticeable difference, even though the machine
was slow. But there wasn't a difference that amounted to
anything.
I recently decided to compare on a
reasonably fast machine running Windows 7 since many
people have said on lists I'm on that Chrome is faster.
There is a very noticeable difference in speed on my
Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would
have been on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the
increase in speed is the reason I say it's better for
general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different than
Firefox or Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn
but it is different. You will likely want a tutorial or
some instructional material. If you are good at learning
by exploring, you may not want or need such material, at
least not to use in depth, but you may benefit in early
learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of the
differences in the interface are that Chrome shows many
things as web pages, such as settings and history and
there is one menu, which you can open with alt f, that is,
hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and
there are also items that open like web pages such as
settings.
I don't recall if there are classic
dialogs that open from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you need
to know that the settings interface doesn't work quite
properly in the following way:
It's a web page-like interface but
there some controls that don't work as they should. I
tried to activate two buttons today and I couldn't do so
in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know what JAWS does.
I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate the
buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because
forms mode may not have been properly calibrated with
browse mode in that interface, at least at times.
I seem to recall that in another
instance, I needed to be in browse mode to activate
something but I'd have to experiment more to know if that
is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether
that was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search
feature in settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome in
the past was that the book marks interface is not nearly
as comvenient to work with as Firefox because the search
feature in Chrome book marks appears to be inaccessible.
I very recently learned from someone on a list I follow
that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say
more or less because I haven't played with it much, but
enough to see that it works well or reasonably well. I'm
hedging because I'd want to play with it more before
saying just how well it works. It' appears to work well
from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the
address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to
find such as york times or new york times and you can up
and down arrow through results. Some of them will be
search results using a search engine but the top results
in the list should be from book marks and history. Try
reading the current line after typing to see if that
contains the first result. I haven't played with the
feature more than a little and I'm not sure. But if it
works well, this would eliminate what I consider to be an
important deficiency. In other words, this feature may
make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in
Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that you
consider important and use them a lot, that may be a
consideration in which browser you want to use. and then,
there's just convenience of not learning a new interface
and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of
course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to
have pages load a good deal faster, but the importance of
speed may vary from user to user. But if you haven't
compared with a hands on test, you may wish to.
Browsing is either identical or nearly
identical between the browsers because they both use
browse mode, or the Virtual PC cursor, which is the JAWS
name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing
Chrome, and then opening and using some web sites.
Control l moves you to the address bar, just as in
Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are
automatically placed on the address bar, but you can
check. If you want to make sure, it takes almost no time
to execute control l.
I hope those who are interested in this
subject find these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied
with Firefox or another browser, they may want to try
Chrome. I haven't used Edge at all so I don't know how
Edge compares.
Gene
|
|
Alt+Enter? Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Wow thanks for this keystroke! I'm starting to love Chrome as wel!
but I didn't grasp what's used for. could you maybe give an example?
yes I understanding it's for searching, but not as clearly as
I'like. I'm sure this keystroke will become one of my main ones!
El 15/05/2018 a las 01:39 a.m., Chris
Norman via Groups.Io escribió:
Hi,
When the downloads window is open you do get the progress
sound.
I've been using Chrome as my default browser for a while now,
and have just bought a Chromebook to boot. I love both.
One of the coolest shortcuts i've found in Chrome is alt enter:
With a page open you navigate to the omnibar (the address bar)
and type a search. When you press alt enter it opens what you
just searched for in a new tab without you having to close your
current web page.
Needless to say I am a Chrome convert.
It also works extremely well with my Mindspace Client, far
better than Firefox did when I tried it last (about a month
ago). Mindspace involves lots of multilayered sounds and lots of
dynamic page creation with JavaScript which Chrome's V8
JavaScript engine handles with ease, far Faster than Firefox's
SpiderMonkey I think it's called.
While the above was of course a shameless plug, if you do
decide to have a look at Mindspace please be aware that it is
pre-alpha, and as such isn't anywhere near complete.
HTH,
Chris
On 15/05/2018 02:01, Kenny wrote:
Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut.
I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these
"Actions" when they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This
is the only issue I have with the browser.
You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea
the download has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up
the Download Manager to check. Even other Actions aren't
spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome browser.
Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be
configured to activate for the download progress for Chrome
too?
On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi,
Alt+Shif
t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which
are the notifications.
All
the best
Steve
Can you please share your tutorial with the list again?
I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the
messages being pushed to Chrome's notification bar
automatically read by NVDA?
Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the
notification bar? The alt+n key combination doesn't seem
to work. Thanks.
On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore wrote:
Hi all!
I have been telling people just how
great Chrome is for two and a half years.
I am so happy that all of you are
finding it to be true.
If anyone needs my text tutorial I
wrote on how to use Chrome, and take you through all
settings, I will paste it on the list.
I have done this around ten times on
all the lists, but you are still finding out for the
first time, just how great Chrome is.
Just read works great for just
reading an article on the page.
CTRL+J allows you to hear the status
of the downloads. Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open
the bookmarks manager, and you can arrange them in
different folders and back them up.
Chrome is great with Youtube, and
streaming media. Chrome is good for a lot other than
just simple browsing.
Have a great one, and I am
celebrating that you are finally getting used to Chrome!
David Moore
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: juan gonzalez
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 5:23 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my
mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
I use the add on called sound on for
navigational sounds.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
On Behalf Of Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io
Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely
changed my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now
Would anyone know if Chrome has
sounds? one of the annoyances with current firefox is
figuring out when downloads are finished or when a page
is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the ticks in
the old version due to navigational sounds.
Until i find a browser with this
function of sound I'm loathe to get a new browser over
ff52, but the problem is that I've been reading that
some sites now do not support the old versions of
Firefox and tell you so when you have things like modal
windows whatever they are.
On XP to make Firefox perform even
reasonably you need to use a version 45, as after this
the actual load up times are hugely slowed, my guess is
that the code is made for multi processor devices, not
single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find
that Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading
times.
Things are no pushing ahead so fast
on sites that its not uncommon to see the message you
browser is unsupported get this or that then you can
come back.
To me this is a weird thing for
commercial sites to do, as they are, in effect pushing
away potential customers, but hey, that is their
business.
Brian
bglists@...
Sent via blueyonder.
Please address personal E-mail to:-
briang1@...,
putting 'Brian Gaff'
in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM
Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed
my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now
I may have sent messages in the past
in which I expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox
than Chrome. At this point, I've changed my mind and,
unless things change over time, as they may as Firefox
continues to implement its new internal technical
changes, I consider Chrome to be superior for general
browsing. I haven't tested it for uses such as streaming
or RSS or other uses. I will therefore only address
general browsing and the interface. Others may want to
comment on other aspects I haven't compared.
This is a long message, a bit of a
review and a bit of discussion of the interface. I hope
those interested in the subject find it useful.
If you try Chrome and find it
superior for general browsing, you may still not want to
use Chrome as your main browser. There are various
considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind and
what you may want to consider. You may have other or
different considerations as well.
The reason I say Chrome is better for
general browsing is because it loads pages faster than
Firefox. You may want to compare and see if the
difference is important to you. There is a very
noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with
Firefox for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on
a slow machine running XP perhaps six or eight months
ago. I had expected that, if Chrome was faster, there
would have been a noticeable difference, even though the
machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that
amounted to anything.
I recently decided to compare on a
reasonably fast machine running Windows 7 since many
people have said on lists I'm on that Chrome is faster.
There is a very noticeable difference in speed on my
Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would
have been on a fast XP machine.
I haven't used Chrome much but the
increase in speed is the reason I say it's better for
general browsing.
The Chrome interface is different
than Firefox or Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult
to learn but it is different. You will likely want a
tutorial or some instructional material. If you are
good at learning by exploring, you may not want or need
such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may
benefit in early learning by using material.
The main things to know in terms of
the differences in the interface are that Chrome shows
many things as web pages, such as settings and history
and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f,
that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are
submenus and there are also items that open like web
pages such as settings.
I don't recall if there are classic
dialogs that open from the main menu.
But if you work with settings, you
need to know that the settings interface doesn't work
quite properly in the following way:
It's a web page-like interface but
there some controls that don't work as they should. I
tried to activate two buttons today and I couldn't do so
in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know what JAWS
does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and
activate the buttons. I may have had to tab to the
button because forms mode may not have been properly
calibrated with browse mode in that interface, at least
at times.
I seem to recall that in another
instance, I needed to be in browse mode to activate
something but I'd have to experiment more to know if
that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of
whether that was necessary.
There's a very useful settings search
feature in settings.
One of my main objections to Chrome
in the past was that the book marks interface is not
nearly as comvenient to work with as Firefox because the
search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be
inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a
list I follow that this problem can be more or less
eliminated. I say more or less because I haven't played
with it much, but enough to see that it works well or
reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play
with it more before saying just how well it works. It'
appears to work well from the very little testing I've
done. If you are in the address bar, you can type some
or all of what you want to find such as york times or
new york times and you can up and down arrow through
results. Some of them will be search results using a
search engine but the top results in the list should be
from book marks and history. Try reading the current
line after typing to see if that contains the first
result. I haven't played with the feature more than a
little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this
would eliminate what I consider to be an important
deficiency. In other words, this feature may make book
marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in Firefox.
If you use Firefox extensions that
you consider important and use them a lot, that may be a
consideration in which browser you want to use. and
then, there's just convenience of not learning a new
interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox.
You, of course, can determine questions like that. It's
nice to have pages load a good deal faster, but the
importance of speed may vary from user to user. But if
you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish
to.
Browsing is either identical or
nearly identical between the browsers because they both
use browse mode, or the Virtual PC cursor, which is the
JAWS name for the same thing.
So you can compare by installing
Chrome, and then opening and using some web sites.
Control l moves you to the address bar, just as in
Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are
automatically placed on the address bar, but you can
check. If you want to make sure, it takes almost no
time to execute control l.
I hope those who are interested in
this subject find these comments useful.
If people are curious or dissatisfied
with Firefox or another browser, they may want to try
Chrome. I haven't used Edge at all so I don't know how
Edge compares.
Gene
--
Gera
Enviado desde Thunderbird
|
|
Thanks Quentin.
Italian OneCore voices are both terrible, but the male voice, which is the default one in NVDA right now, is really unbearable.
They both speak in a very unnatural way. I'm a lover of Eloquence and Espeak (mainly Espeak), because all Italian quality voices in Windows tend to have some sort of foreign accents.
I don't care so much for the sound of the voice, as for the prosody and intonation, and the way they interpret punctuation.
Eloquence is by far the best from this point of view, followed by Espeak.
Not even Vocalizer Express is as good, in my opinion.
Ciao,
Ollie
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Il 15/05/2018 11:31, Quentin Christensen ha scritto: Ok firstly to help you now:
1. Open your NVDA general preferences (NVDA+CONTROL+G) 2. TAB to "Use currently saved settings on the logon and other secure screens" (or the Italian equivalent thereof) 3. Press ENTER to activate that button, and then alt+y to OK the UAC dialog which appears.
Now you should have the same voice on the logon screen as you do regularly.
No re the Italian OneCore voice, has this always been a problem, or is it new? My version of Windows is offering me two Italian languages to install Italiano (Italia) and Italiano (Swizzera). If you install both (and their speech packs), it should give you access to extra voices. You can leave everything set as it is and just access the extra voices in NVDA if you want, so it shouldn't affect anything else. That could be worth trying in case the other voices are any better.
Otherwise, can you give me some ideas and examples of the problems with Italian? I can't do much except report them on to Microsoft, and I would encourage you to do the same. You can press WINDOWS+F to open the feedback centre. I'm sure anyone can do that (in Windows 10).
Kind regards
Quentin.
On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 5:56 PM, Mallard <mallard@... <mailto:mallard@...>> wrote:
Hello,
Yes, it's the OneCore that sounds horrible!
It comes up at the Windows Logon, and it sounds awful...
I tried to change it, but it still comes up. When NVDA is loaded, hen, my defaullt synth speaks normally. Ciao, Ollie
Il 15/05/2018 09:23, Quentin Christensen ha scritto:
Olle,
Do you mean OneCore sounds horrible in Italian, or the current version of eSpeak NG?
Re changing the synthesizer, eSpeak NG is still included, it's just that OneCore is the default in Windows 10. If that is problematic, we'll have to look into it, though of course, as regularly discussed here, eSpeak NG is not perfect either!
Quentin.
On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 5:05 PM, Mallard <mallard@... <mailto:mallard@...> <mailto:mallard@... <mailto:mallard@...>>> wrote:
Except for the Italian voices, which sound terrible. That's not so much the voice qualiti itself, but the accent. It sounds like someone who has trouble speaking; someone who's had a stroke, or something... Really disgraceful!
Is there a way to change it back to Espeak?
Thanks, ciao,
Ollie
Il 15/05/2018 07:42, Rosemarie Chavarria ha scritto:
Hi, Quentin,
Wow, that's neat about the one-core voices being the default voices now. I like e-speakbut the one-core voices sound more natural.
Rosemarie
On 5/14/2018 9:16 PM, Quentin Christensen wrote:
HI everyone,
This week's In-Process is out, and it includes some of the goodness you can expect from NVDA 2018.2, plus an update on our first Certified Expert in India and a hat-tip to our Windows Insiders
All at: https://www.nvaccess.org/post/in-process-15th-may-2018/ <https://www.nvaccess.org/post/in-process-15th-may-2018/> <https://www.nvaccess.org/post/in-process-15th-may-2018/ <https://www.nvaccess.org/post/in-process-15th-may-2018/>>
#NVDAsr
-- Quentin Christensen Training and Support Manager
Official NVDA Training modules and expert certification now available: http://www.nvaccess.org/shop/
www.nvaccess.org <http://www.nvaccess.org> <http://www.nvaccess.org> <http://www.nvaccess.org/> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess <http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess> <http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess <http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess>> Twitter: @NVAccess
-- Quentin Christensen Training and Support Manager
Official NVDA Training modules and expert certification now available: http://www.nvaccess.org/shop/
www.nvaccess.org <http://www.nvaccess.org> <http://www.nvaccess.org/> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess <http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess> Twitter: @NVAccess
-- Quentin Christensen Training and Support Manager
Official NVDA Training modules and expert certification now available: http://www.nvaccess.org/shop/
www.nvaccess.org <http://www.nvaccess.org/> Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess Twitter: @NVAccess
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NVDA master snapshot and vs2017 don't work well at this stage.
Jaffar Sidek <jaffar.sidek10@...>
Hi. I am bringing this up so that when NVDA 18.2 comes out, the visual studio's 2017 accessibility with NVDA will still be maintained. One bug that I have noticed is that when I try to include or libraries that I need for my project from other frameworks or development tools through the property manager for C or C++ development, NVDA won't allow you to type in the edit box that matters. Pressing the keys will just produce a beep sound, just as in Read Only edit boxes. I have the visual studio addon installed and I don't know if it is messing up with NVDA's ability to access visual studio on it's own. Clarification is needed here. Also, NVDA tends to say previous items on a list or combo box before you land on the next one. For example, if the first item is "Help" and the second item is "Go",the arrow down key is pressed to go to the next item, NVDA will repeat the first item on the list, then say the second item, as in "Help", "Go", this is especially true for Intellisense which has numerous possibilities, which cuts down on productivity. I hope I am making myself clear here. Cheers!
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Ok firstly to help you now:
1. Open your NVDA general preferences (NVDA+CONTROL+G) 2. TAB to "Use currently saved settings on the logon and other secure screens" (or the Italian equivalent thereof) 3. Press ENTER to activate that button, and then alt+y to OK the UAC dialog which appears.
Now you should have the same voice on the logon screen as you do regularly.
No re the Italian OneCore voice, has this always been a problem, or is it new? My version of Windows is offering me two Italian languages to install Italiano (Italia) and Italiano (Swizzera). If you install both (and their speech packs), it should give you access to extra voices. You can leave everything set as it is and just access the extra voices in NVDA if you want, so it shouldn't affect anything else. That could be worth trying in case the other voices are any better.
Otherwise, can you give me some ideas and examples of the problems with Italian? I can't do much except report them on to Microsoft, and I would encourage you to do the same. You can press WINDOWS+F to open the feedback centre. I'm sure anyone can do that (in Windows 10).
Kind regards
Quentin.
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On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 5:56 PM, Mallard <mallard@...> wrote: Hello,
Yes, it's the OneCore that sounds horrible!
It comes up at the Windows Logon, and it sounds awful...
I tried to change it, but it still comes up. When NVDA is loaded, hen, my defaullt synth speaks normally.
Ciao,
Ollie
Il 15/05/2018 09:23, Quentin Christensen ha scritto:
Olle,
Do you mean OneCore sounds horrible in Italian, or the current version of eSpeak NG?
Re changing the synthesizer, eSpeak NG is still included, it's just that OneCore is the default in Windows 10. If that is problematic, we'll have to look into it, though of course, as regularly discussed here, eSpeak NG is not perfect either!
Quentin.
On Tue, May 15, 2018 at 5:05 PM, Mallard < mallard@... <mailto: mallard@...>> wrote:
Except for the Italian voices, which sound terrible. That's not so
much the voice qualiti itself, but the accent. It sounds like
someone who has trouble speaking; someone who's had a stroke, or
something... Really disgraceful!
Is there a way to change it back to Espeak?
Thanks, ciao,
Ollie
Il 15/05/2018 07:42, Rosemarie Chavarria ha scritto:
Hi, Quentin,
Wow, that's neat about the one-core voices being the default
voices now. I like e-speakbut the one-core voices sound more
natural.
Rosemarie
On 5/14/2018 9:16 PM, Quentin Christensen wrote:
HI everyone,
This week's In-Process is out, and it includes some of the
goodness you can expect from NVDA 2018.2, plus an update
on our first Certified Expert in India and a hat-tip to
our Windows Insiders
All at:
https://www.nvaccess.org/post/in-process-15th-may-2018/
< https://www.nvaccess.org/post/in-process-15th-may-2018/>
#NVDAsr
-- Quentin Christensen
Training and Support Manager
Official NVDA Training modules and expert certification
now available: http://www.nvaccess.org/shop/
www.nvaccess.org < http://www.nvaccess.org>
< http://www.nvaccess.org/>
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess
<http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess>
Twitter: @NVAccess
--
Quentin Christensen
Training and Support Manager
Official NVDA Training modules and expert certification now available: http://www.nvaccess.org/shop/
www.nvaccess.org <http://www.nvaccess.org/>
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NVAccess
Twitter: @NVAccess
-- Quentin Christensen Training and Support Manager
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Re: I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now
Hi Kenny, I’m not aware that downloads speak in any screen reader. I believe this should be a Chrome change. However, it’s easy enough for me to press Control-J and go look at the percentages. Once it’s in focus, it should be read to you. All the best Steve
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Kenny Sent: 15 May 2018 02:02 To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now Thanks for sharing the proper shortcut. I'm curious why hasn't NVDA been configured to speak these "Actions" when they dynamically appear in Google Chrome? This is the only issue I have with the browser. You click on a link to download a file and you have no idea the download has started. You have to hit Ctrl+j to bring up the Download Manager to check. Even other Actions aren't spoken automatically by NVDA for the Chrome browser. Can't that cool NVDA installation progress sound be configured to activate for the download progress for Chrome too? On 5/14/2018 5:21 PM, Steve Nutt wrote:
Hi, Alt+Shif t+A should get you into what Chrome calls Actions, which are the notifications. All the best Steve Can you please share your tutorial with the list again? I'm hoping you gone over a work around to have the messages being pushed to Chrome's notification bar automatically read by NVDA? Also what is the shortcut key to be placed in the notification bar? The alt+n key combination doesn't seem to work. Thanks. On 5/6/2018 6:21 PM, David Moore wrote:
Hi all! I have been telling people just how great Chrome is for two and a half years. I am so happy that all of you are finding it to be true. If anyone needs my text tutorial I wrote on how to use Chrome, and take you through all settings, I will paste it on the list. I have done this around ten times on all the lists, but you are still finding out for the first time, just how great Chrome is. Just read works great for just reading an article on the page. CTRL+J allows you to hear the status of the downloads. Now, CTRL+Shift+O allows you to open the bookmarks manager, and you can arrange them in different folders and back them up. Chrome is great with Youtube, and streaming media. Chrome is good for a lot other than just simple browsing. Have a great one, and I am celebrating that you are finally getting used to Chrome! David Moore Sent from Mail for Windows 10 From: juan gonzalez Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 5:23 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it muchmore now I use the add on called sound on for navigational sounds. -----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io Sent: Sunday, May 6, 2018 9:28 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now Would anyone know if Chrome has sounds? one of the annoyances with current firefox is figuring out when downloads are finished or when a page is refreshing itself, ie you normally hear the ticks in the old version due to navigational sounds. Until i find a browser with this function of sound I'm loathe to get a new browser over ff52, but the problem is that I've been reading that some sites now do not support the old versions of Firefox and tell you so when you have things like modal windows whatever they are. On XP to make Firefox perform even reasonably you need to use a version 45, as after this the actual load up times are hugely slowed, my guess is that the code is made for multi processor devices, not single core ones.This is also why on xp you might find that Chrome and firefox are similar in page loading times. Things are no pushing ahead so fast on sites that its not uncommon to see the message you browser is unsupported get this or that then you can come back. To me this is a weird thing for commercial sites to do, as they are, in effect pushing away potential customers, but hey, that is their business. Brian bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field. ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gene" <gsasner@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2018 10:57 AM Subject: [nvda] I've largely changed my mind about Chrome, I like it much more now I may have sent messages in the past in which I expressed a much stronger liking for Firefox than Chrome. At this point, I've changed my mind and, unless things change over time, as they may as Firefox continues to implement its new internal technical changes, I consider Chrome to be superior for general browsing. I haven't tested it for uses such as streaming or RSS or other uses. I will therefore only address general browsing and the interface. Others may want to comment on other aspects I haven't compared. This is a long message, a bit of a review and a bit of discussion of the interface. I hope those interested in the subject find it useful. If you try Chrome and find it superior for general browsing, you may still not want to use Chrome as your main browser. There are various considerations. I'll explain why I changed my mind and what you may want to consider. You may have other or different considerations as well. The reason I say Chrome is better for general browsing is because it loads pages faster than Firefox. You may want to compare and see if the difference is important to you. There is a very noticeable difference. I hadn't compared Chrome with Firefox for speed on a fast machine. I compared them on a slow machine running XP perhaps six or eight months ago. I had expected that, if Chrome was faster, there would have been a noticeable difference, even though the machine was slow. But there wasn't a difference that amounted to anything. I recently decided to compare on a reasonably fast machine running Windows 7 since many people have said on lists I'm on that Chrome is faster. There is a very noticeable difference in speed on my Windows 7 machine. I don't know what the results would have been on a fast XP machine. I haven't used Chrome much but the increase in speed is the reason I say it's better for general browsing. The Chrome interface is different than Firefox or Internet Explorer. It isn't difficult to learn but it is different. You will likely want a tutorial or some instructional material. If you are good at learning by exploring, you may not want or need such material, at least not to use in depth, but you may benefit in early learning by using material. The main things to know in terms of the differences in the interface are that Chrome shows many things as web pages, such as settings and history and there is one menu, which you can open with alt f, that is, hold alt and press f. Of course, there are submenus and there are also items that open like web pages such as settings. I don't recall if there are classic dialogs that open from the main menu. But if you work with settings, you need to know that the settings interface doesn't work quite properly in the following way: It's a web page-like interface but there some controls that don't work as they should. I tried to activate two buttons today and I couldn't do so in browse mode using NVDA. I don't know what JAWS does. I had to manually go into forms mode, and activate the buttons. I may have had to tab to the button because forms mode may not have been properly calibrated with browse mode in that interface, at least at times. I seem to recall that in another instance, I needed to be in browse mode to activate something but I'd have to experiment more to know if that is the case since I don't have a clear memory of whether that was necessary. There's a very useful settings search feature in settings. One of my main objections to Chrome in the past was that the book marks interface is not nearly as comvenient to work with as Firefox because the search feature in Chrome book marks appears to be inaccessible. I very recently learned from someone on a list I follow that this problem can be more or less eliminated. I say more or less because I haven't played with it much, but enough to see that it works well or reasonably well. I'm hedging because I'd want to play with it more before saying just how well it works. It' appears to work well from the very little testing I've done. If you are in the address bar, you can type some or all of what you want to find such as york times or new york times and you can up and down arrow through results. Some of them will be search results using a search engine but the top results in the list should be from book marks and history. Try reading the current line after typing to see if that contains the first result. I haven't played with the feature more than a little and I'm not sure. But if it works well, this would eliminate what I consider to be an important deficiency. In other words, this feature may make book marks just as easy to use in Chrome as in Firefox. If you use Firefox extensions that you consider important and use them a lot, that may be a consideration in which browser you want to use. and then, there's just convenience of not learning a new interface and continuing to use the familiar Firefox. You, of course, can determine questions like that. It's nice to have pages load a good deal faster, but the importance of speed may vary from user to user. But if you haven't compared with a hands on test, you may wish to. Browsing is either identical or nearly identical between the browsers because they both use browse mode, or the Virtual PC cursor, which is the JAWS name for the same thing. So you can compare by installing Chrome, and then opening and using some web sites. Control l moves you to the address bar, just as in Firefox. I believe when you open Chrome, you are automatically placed on the address bar, but you can check. If you want to make sure, it takes almost no time to execute control l. I hope those who are interested in this subject find these comments useful. If people are curious or dissatisfied with Firefox or another browser, they may want to try Chrome. I haven't used Edge at all so I don't know how Edge compares. Gene
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