Re: Using NVDA With Remote!
Ann Byrne <annakb@...>
If you are set up to control the other computer, remember to press f11 so you can see/hear it.
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At 04:04 PM 1/11/2021, you wrote:
Hello,
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Using NVDA With Remote!
Thomas E Williamson, Senior
Hello,
When I connect to another's person usin nvda remote, it does not read on my end, what she hears, on her end? What might be the problem, why I can not hear, while to he computer? Thanks for your help! Regards, Thomas.
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Re: Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read
#adminnotice
Gene
You yourself said in an earlier message that you have trouble searching. It may be because you are making searches far too complicated. You can disagree and perhaps you are disaggreeing because searching may have been more complicated in the nineties. But I'm telling you from years of experience with searching well, that your ideas of search are completely wrong. I don't know what you mean about quotation marks being a default in Google. they aren't. Searches are not case sensative by default. You may be able to make a search case sensative, I've never checked but as I said they aren't by default. and it usually doesn't matter. Search engines these days, the sophisticated ones are smart enough to find something without customizing searches with such things as quotation marks and boolean operators. There are rare times when I do a search and I get lots of poor matches when I may use quotation marks. But most of the time, I can search for the name of a book, for example no quotes no anything other than the name and if I want to see reviews, I add the word review or reviews and I almost always get good results. Try it and see. Just write what you want to search for and see what happens.
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Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Dave Grossoehme Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 3:05 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read Good Afternoon;: I will disagree with you 100% here on your search skills. The quotation mark is an automatic with a lot of search engines. You must like Googgle following you to use that search engine. The next thing is the question of what are you going to do it your information is case sensitive and you don't use upper and lower case to find the information. There are times that you could be searching for hours if you don't use all the search tools. Dave On 1/4/2021 6:34 PM, Gene wrote: I don't know if this message is getting too detailed and most of it should be on the chat list but it may help some or many people.
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Re: Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read
#adminnotice
Gene
I don't know if we can discuss your search problems well without knowing how you search, what sort of phrases you use, whether you use things like quotation marks, etc.
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Good search engines today are consumer products and make searching as easy as possible. These days, you don't have to know much to get good results but if people do certain things such as misuse quotation marks, they may get poor results. Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Dave Grossoehme Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 2:33 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read Good Afternoon: As far as the search problem I have a computer user from back in the early '90s. I still have problems in searching. I have gone so far as changing search engines if I can't find the exact item that I am hunting for. Dave On 1/4/2021 5:29 PM, Orlando Enrique Fiol via groups.io wrote: At 06:23 PM 1/4/2021, Brian Vogel wrote:Betsy, you know I've lent you a hand directly on occasions, and IMy frustrations with online searches are not with phrasing my queries in order to get hits; I usually get hundreds to thousands of results. My issue is in finding the relevant information on the pages for each activated result. Microsoft's forums, the Super User forums and many others are so cluttered with header information, upvote/downvote crap and ads for driver checking software that I often find myself no better informed after navigating those pages by links, text, controls, articles, block quotes, etc.
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Re: Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read
#adminnotice
Dave Grossoehme
Good Afternoon;: I will disagree with you 100% here on your search skills. The quotation mark is an automatic with a lot of search engines. You must like Googgle following you to use that search engine. The next thing is the question of what are you going to do it your information is case sensitive and you don't use upper and lower case to find the information. There are times that you could be searching for hours if you don't use all the search tools.
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Dave
On 1/4/2021 6:34 PM, Gene wrote:
I don't know if this message is getting too detailed and most of it should be on the chat list but it may help some or many people.
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Re: Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read
#adminnotice
Dave Grossoehme
Good Afternoon: Being Jaws and NVDA use different programming languages, it doesn't make it difficult to have the same outcomes. Jaws uses the C programming Language as far as I know. NVDA usesPython Computer programming language.
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Dave
On 1/4/2021 5:40 PM, Gene wrote:
Perhaps one of the developers will address the question. I wonder if there is a technical reason for this, such as how Windows provides information to screen-readers. Older screen-readers, such as JAWS, I believe, use a different method for getting a lot of the kinds of information you are discussing.
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Re: Admin's Notes Re List Conduct, Please Read
#adminnotice
Dave Grossoehme
Good Afternoon: As far as the search problem I have a computer user from back in the early '90s. I still have problems in searching. I have gone so far as changing search engines if I can't find the exact item that I am hunting for.
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Dave
On 1/4/2021 5:29 PM, Orlando Enrique Fiol via groups.io wrote:
At 06:23 PM 1/4/2021, Brian Vogel wrote:Betsy, you know I've lent you a hand directly on occasions, and IMy frustrations with online searches are not with phrasing my queries in order to get hits; I usually get hundreds to thousands of results. My issue is in finding the relevant information on the pages for each activated result. Microsoft's forums, the Super User forums and many others are so cluttered with header information, upvote/downvote crap and ads for driver checking software that I often find myself no better informed after navigating those pages by links, text, controls, articles, block quotes, etc.
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Re: OCR: Interacting with items from recognized UI
Luke Robinett <blindgroupsluke@...>
Hi Kara, Thanks for your reply. I think what I wasn’t clear on is that hitting enter or space in the OCR viewer actually generates a left click on that item, something I was able to confirm. That clears up a lot of my confusion. I think you might be right that the likely culprit is simply that the label isn’t actually part of the UI control so isn’t doing anything when I click it. Until we get more sophisticated GUI recognition tools in NVDA, my best bet is probably just to have my wife line the mouse cursor up with the controls I need so I can capture some golden cursor hotspots for future use. Thanks again to everybody who replied, Luke
On Jan 11, 2021, at 2:08 AM, Kara Goldfinch <kara.louise18@...> wrote:
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
Gene
I'm not talking about using keyboard commands. I'm simply saying that the discussion didn't state that you need to route the mouse with NVDA before using the physical mouse click commands. I don't know how many people know that routing the virtual mouse routs the mouse, just as moving the mouse with a physical mouse does. Because we don't know who is following the thread, it is a good idea to say to route the mouse with NVDA before using the physical click commands and that is all I'm saying.
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I happened to work with a trainer who specifically said that when you move the mouse with a screen-reader you are moving the mouse. I do not assume that a lot of people have been told that and they may think that using a physical mouse is somehow different. You are discussing a procedure not commonly used by blind people and it is goode to clarify. I'm not saying that you should explain things that are common knowledge. Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Vogel Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 11:04 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] question about the right click button numpad star* Gene, By the way, you only need to route the mouse in certain circumstances as well. For instance, if I'm in File Explorer, and have focus with selection on a specific file or group of files, gained strictly using keyboard commands, a right click will bring up the context menu that's appropriate for that context (which is different for a single select versus multi select and a folder select versus file select etc.) And I presume that this is a known for anyone who's used Windows for any period of time (whether with NVDA or not). You learn what's necessary when by trial and error, and I'm willing to assume most here have already undergone said trial and error before ever having joined, and am willing to walk through it if the need to do so arises. It seldom does. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
Gene,
By the way, you only need to route the mouse in certain circumstances as well. For instance, if I'm in File Explorer, and have focus with selection on a specific file or group of files, gained strictly using keyboard commands, a right click will bring up the context menu that's appropriate for that context (which is different for a single select versus multi select and a folder select versus file select etc.) And I presume that this is a known for anyone who's used Windows for any period of time (whether with NVDA or not). You learn what's necessary when by trial and error, and I'm willing to assume most here have already undergone said trial and error before ever having joined, and am willing to walk through it if the need to do so arises. It seldom does. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
On Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 11:53 AM, Gene wrote:
You can have focus on something by using the arrow keys to move to something in a list, for example. The mouse is not at the location you are.- Gene, focus means, to me, "as appropriate for the thing being discussed." You are 100% correct, and what you've said, in my opinion, goes without saying. I am not going to drag out every conversation by "clarifying" things I am willing to believe a user already knows, or will end up asking if they don't and something goes wrong. I do not presume neophytes, but people asking focused questions who are otherwise quite familiar with mouse movement versus simple focus. When you're talking about mouse type commands "mouse focus," for lack of a better term, is what should be presumed. Route mouse commands should have already been used. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
Gene
You can have focus on something by using the arrow keys to move to something in a list, for example. The mouse is not at the location you are. To use the click commands, whether on the mouse itself or in NVDA, you must move the mouse to the location where you want to work. Discussing covering the mouse pad means the only way you can move the mouse is with the NVDA mouse movement command before clicking it. The person you are addressing may already be doing that and may understand what you are describing. But it is important to clarify the point to avoid confusion. The mouse must still be moved before clicking no matter how you click it.
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Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Vogel Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 10:28 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] question about the right click button numpad star* On Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 11:10 AM, Gene wrote: Are you saying you move the mouse using the NVDA mouse movement command, then click with the actual mouse click keys?- I'm not saying that, at least not specifically. What I'm saying is that if you have focus on something where you need a right or left click, it makes way more sense to use a real right or left click, and nowhere is that simpler than on a laptop. The original question had nothing to do with gaining focus on something, so I am taking that as a non-issue. The question was how to make NVDA do a CTRL+Click (meaning left click) and what I'm saying is that if you can avoid having any need for NVDA to do it, and can just do it sans any emulation, the latter option is preferable. And for keyboards without an applications key (and mine is one of them), the earlier advice from yourself about SHIFT+F10 being the way to bring up the context menu from the keyboard (if you're not using a real right click) is the correct one. This is another of those instances where very, very rarely SHIFT+F10 (or hitting Applications/menu key) and right click are not equivalent, but it's so rare that it's not even worth discussing. And in those cases I've yet to see right click not do what's wanted, but the keyboard options didn't. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
That should have been "a right click," not a CTRL+Click. We have parallel topics right now that still have what, in my opinion, is the same solution: use the real keys.
-- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
On Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 11:10 AM, Gene wrote:
Are you saying you move the mouse using the NVDA mouse movement command, then click with the actual mouse click keys?- I'm not saying that, at least not specifically. What I'm saying is that if you have focus on something where you need a right or left click, it makes way more sense to use a real right or left click, and nowhere is that simpler than on a laptop. The original question had nothing to do with gaining focus on something, so I am taking that as a non-issue. The question was how to make NVDA do a CTRL+Click (meaning left click) and what I'm saying is that if you can avoid having any need for NVDA to do it, and can just do it sans any emulation, the latter option is preferable. And for keyboards without an applications key (and mine is one of them), the earlier advice from yourself about SHIFT+F10 being the way to bring up the context menu from the keyboard (if you're not using a real right click) is the correct one. This is another of those instances where very, very rarely SHIFT+F10 (or hitting Applications/menu key) and right click are not equivalent, but it's so rare that it's not even worth discussing. And in those cases I've yet to see right click not do what's wanted, but the keyboard options didn't. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
Gene
Are you saying you move the mouse using the NVDA mouse movement command, then click with the actual mouse click keys? My problem is generally not clicking as provided for in NVDA, but in instances where I can't move to something using the mouse movement command for technical reasons I don't know. There are times on web pages where the move mouse to object navigator position doesn't work. I'm not saying that the NVDA mouse click commands don't have problems at times, I don't know, but in general, my problem is being able to move the mouse using the NVDA mouse movement command..
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Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Brian Vogel Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 9:12 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] question about the right click button numpad star* On Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 05:56 AM, tilahun muniye wrote: The right click and application key seem similar but not at all.- I have yet to see a single instance of where a true right click will not do exactly what hitting the applications/menu key does, but have seen a very rare few instances where hitting the applications/menu key does not do what true right click does. I do not understand why anyone using a laptop does not simply mask off the thumb touchpad area of the full mousepad with cardboard to prevent mouse movement and use the actual left and right click keys. It's a simple thing to do, and it saves scads of heartache with emulated mouse clicks. The same thing can be done with a real mouse by putting tape over the optical port that allows it to detect movement. I've been doing this with virtually every student I've ever had, as mouse key emulation remains far from perfect and I've had plenty of occasions where it just doesn't work. It's easy to keep access to the actual mouse left and right click keys while preventing any possibility of pointer movement. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: moving a chart in excel office365 with NVDA
Josh,
See: How to move a specific chart to a new sheet in Excel?
-- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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moving a chart in excel office365 with NVDA
Josh Kennedy
Hi, I will soon be getting a braille buddy personal braille printer from www.irie-at.com
I will want to emboss charts and graphs in Excel. What keyboard commands do I use to select and move an inserted chart into its own worksheet, required by the tiger software suite addon in order to emboss the chart with braille labels?
Josh
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
On Mon, Jan 11, 2021 at 05:56 AM, tilahun muniye wrote:
The right click and application key seem similar but not at all.- I have yet to see a single instance of where a true right click will not do exactly what hitting the applications/menu key does, but have seen a very rare few instances where hitting the applications/menu key does not do what true right click does. I do not understand why anyone using a laptop does not simply mask off the thumb touchpad area of the full mousepad with cardboard to prevent mouse movement and use the actual left and right click keys. It's a simple thing to do, and it saves scads of heartache with emulated mouse clicks. The same thing can be done with a real mouse by putting tape over the optical port that allows it to detect movement. I've been doing this with virtually every student I've ever had, as mouse key emulation remains far from perfect and I've had plenty of occasions where it just doesn't work. It's easy to keep access to the actual mouse left and right click keys while preventing any possibility of pointer movement. -- Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 20H2, Build 19042 The depths of denial one can be pushed to by outside forces of disapproval can make you not even recognize yourself to yourself. ~ Brian Vogel
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Re: Tony's add-ons: new and updated
Suhas D
sentence nav, word nav, and symbols, does sound quite
interesting. Will give it a try.
thanks. ---Suhas
Sent from Thunderbird — “Things can turn out differently, Apollo.Rick Riordan On 1/10/2021 3:43, Tony Malykh wrote:
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Re: question about the right click button numpad star*
Gene
Use shift f10. That usually works the same as the applications key, but not always.
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Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Nikos Demetriou via groups.io Sent: Monday, January 11, 2021 4:34 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] question about the right click button numpad star* Hi all. I recently bought a new hp laptop. As you probably know, recent laptops unfortunately don't have an application key. NVDA has got a right click button which is the numpad *, but this shortcut unfortunately cannot act as an application key because it follows the focus of the mouse instead of the focus of the keyboard. If we want to use this button we will have to press first nvda+/ to make the mouse to follow where the navigator object is. I don't know if it's possible to make the numpad * to always follow the navigator object so it can act as an application key since we don't have one. Nikos
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