Date   

Re: Auto alt text with Chrome.

 

On Fri, Oct 11, 2019 at 09:48 AM, Robert Kingett wrote:
The mods should really add the NVDA RSS feed and the official add ons RSS feed to the group.
It wouldn't matter whether we did (and I say that from lots of direct experience).

The NVDA Add-Ons page has an RSS link, announced as such:  https://addons.nvda-project.org/index.en.rss

If NVAccess has an RSS feed they've done a mighty fine job of hiding it on the website.  I've just done some looking and it's certainly not obvious if it's there at all somewhere.

If one is looking for an RSS feed best practice is always to "go to the source."
 
--

Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 1903, Build 18362  

The color of truth is grey.

           ~ André Gide

 

 


Re: Going to Top/End of Document with Braille Display

kelby carlson <kelbycarlson@...>
 

The Touch and the Brailliant are in the same line, yes.

On Oct 11, 2019, at 9:04 AM, David Csercsics <bleeblat@...> wrote:

There is but only if you have the braille extender add-on installed. If you want to get something useful from NVDA I recommend you install the add-on. The commands are a bit weird though. Nothing at all like VoiceOver or JAWS so it'd take a bit to get used to. Once that add-on is installed then you can read the documentation and see all the commands assigned. I think maybe the braille note touch emulates a brailliant, but I'm not sure. If that's the case I can probably help you if you have trouble.






Re: Auto alt text with Chrome.

 

Great idea! I am gonna check it out now. The mods should really add the NVDA RSS feed and the official add ons RSS feed to the group.


Re: Auto alt text with Chrome.

 

On a related note, don't forget about the NVDA Add-On, 

Image Describer

--

Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 1903, Build 18362  

The color of truth is grey.

           ~ André Gide

 

 


Locked Re: blank line reading by NVDA

 

This topic has not only run its course, but several side courses as well.

For those who may wish to correspond with anyone who's posted messages to the topic, if you look at the bottom of the message a given member sent there will be a Reply to Sender link.  Activating it will open an e-mail composition window with the message's sender in the To: field and the word "Private:" followed by the thread topic as the subject.  You can, of course, alter the subject to suit yourself.

This topic is now locked.
--

Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 1903, Build 18362  

The color of truth is grey.

           ~ André Gide

 

 


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

On Fri, Oct 11, 2019 at 02:52 AM, molly the blind tech lover wrote:
I like talking about this stuff but perhaps we should discuss this in  the chat? We’ve gotten off the subject of NVDA.
Indeed, and thank you for recognizing that, Molly.   This is a perfect example of a topic that fits, precisely, something that's included in the group welcome message/rules and monthly reminder:
-------------------------------------------------
It is presumed that the majority of members will be using NVDA, and possibly other screen readers, as part of their daily routine.  This being the case, before you post a message you have to consider whether the question you are about to ask is actually about NVDA itself, or about the program you’re using it to access.  Questions of the form, How do I use . . . with NVDA?, are very seldom about NVDA, but are almost always about the program being accessed with NVDA.
-------------------------------------------------

Discussing how to actually use a given piece of software, where any discussion of the screen reader being used is truly incidental, is something that belongs in the Chat Subgroup or on a group dedicated to that piece of software.

Chat Subgroup Addresses:

This topic is now locked.
 
--

Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 1903, Build 18362  

The color of truth is grey.

           ~ André Gide

 

 


Locked Re: OT: Windows 10 update behaving oddly since yesterday - Version 1903 (OS Build 18362.418)

 

Jacob,

            This question is off-topic for here, but I'll try to give you some help before I lock it.

             First, if you are experiencing unexpected issues immediately or very shortly after any Windows update has been applied, then the first thing you should do is use the Windows 10 built-in capability to uninstall the latest update that’s suspected of causing the issue:

1.     Open Settings, Update & Security.  This should take you to the Windows Update Pane by default.

2.     In the Windows Update Pane, locate the View update history control, and activate it.

3.     In the View Update History dialog, locate the Uninstall updates link and activate it.

4.     In the Installed Updates dialog, the updates will be listed in groupings, with the groups alphabetically ordered, and the items within each group ordered by date – most recently installed first (if no one has changed the defaults).  In most cases, you’ll be looking to uninstall a Microsoft Windows update, and those are generally the final group.  The number of updates available for uninstalling is shown in parentheses after the Microsoft Windows group name.

5.     Almost all Windows Updates will have a KB number associated with them, and if you know that use this as what you search on for the actual update.  Select it.

6.     Activate the Uninstall button located above the list of updates, and the selected update will be uninstalled.

If uninstalling the update causes the issue to disappear then either there is an issue with the update itself or it possibly could have "burped" during being applied and not been applied 100% correctly.   One hopes that the next time it applies that it will either have had a fix made and/or will not have any issues during installation.

There is a group, Windows 10 for Screen Reader Users, that is appropriate for this question and where it's likely to get an answer or answers far more rapidly than it might here:
Subscribe: win10+subscribe@win10.groups.io
Post: win10@win10.groups.io

We also have the NVDA Chat Subgroup, but in this case I'd strongly suggest "going to the source."

This topic is now locked.


--

Brian - Windows 10 Pro, 64-Bit, Version 1903, Build 18362  

The color of truth is grey.

           ~ André Gide

 

 


Re: Going to Top/End of Document with Braille Display

David Csercsics <bleeblat@...>
 

There is but only if you have the braille extender add-on installed. If you want to get something useful from NVDA I recommend you install the add-on. The commands are a bit weird though. Nothing at all like VoiceOver or JAWS so it'd take a bit to get used to. Once that add-on is installed then you can read the documentation and see all the commands assigned. I think maybe the braille note touch emulates a brailliant, but I'm not sure. If that's the case I can probably help you if you have trouble.


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

Damien Garwood <damien@...>
 

Hi Wayne,
Very useful tip, thanks for that!
Cheers,
Damien.

On 11/10/2019 03:39 pm, wayne wrote:
When you're talking about cdex sometimes there are things you don't think about trying, that would include me. What I'm going to say doesn't work on every program, but it worked with cdex. after downloading the most recent version of cdex, I thought lets just try to unzip it, and of course depending on how the program is packed it will either work or not work. but with cdex it does, so just create a shortcut to the program, put it on your desktop and you're ready to use cdex without spyware. If you want to manipulate the ini file it will be somewhere in your applications folder, most likely. I have had great success with windows 7 and windows 10.
Wayne
----- Original Message ----- From: "Damien Garwood" <damien@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2019 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

Hi Arlene,
For ripping, I use GoldWave (goldwave.com). Unfortunately that isn't free, and it isn't a dedicated CD ripper even though it is very good at it.
I used to use the free dedicated ripper CDEX (cdex.mu), until it became riddled with adware. Of course, there is still the portable version, but that is quite a bit older.
Note that these tools cannot burn CD's.
For burning, I have been using a program called CDBurnerXP (cdburnerxp.se) for a while now. Don't get confused by the "XP" in the name - I have successfully used it on Windows 7 and beyond. Note though that the default installer comes with InstallCore (some kind of advertising platform), so to get the clean installer and/or portable version you need to click on the "more download options" link on the download page. That is a free burner that can do everything from CD to DVD, data or audio.
All three tools are more or less totally accessible with NVDA and are, in my view, a lot simpler and a lot more flexible than using Winamp's equivalents or the builtin Windows tools.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Damien.

On 11/10/2019 05:02 am, Arlene wrote:
It’s true. This new win ten box came without one. I did have to buy an external cd rom.

Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10

*From: *Annette Moore <mailto:angelgirl52376@...>
*Sent: *October 10, 2019 9:00 PM
*To: *nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
*Subject: *Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

Yes, mine did, but this machine is nearly six years old now--my, how time does fly! I hear a lot of the newer ones now don't, though. I'd be lost without a CD Rom drive because my choir music from church still comes on CD's. I suppose, though, I could talk my choir director into getting Dropbox and we could share files that way if necessary, but for now, I can still use and rip the CD's he gives me on this machine using CDEX. that's good you can get external CDRom drives.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:54 PM, Arlene wrote:

    Anette, did your computer come with a cd rom drive? This ten box
    did not come with one. I did purchase a external cd rom drive.

    Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for
    Windows 10

    *From: *Annette Moore <mailto:angelgirl52376@...>
    *Sent: *October 10, 2019 8:41 PM
    *To: *nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
    *Subject: *Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

    I use Cdex, but all I do is insert my CD, hit f9 and it starts
    ripping. I don't do anything else and I don't know how the program
    works aside from that. I find my ripped CD in the mp3 folder under
    users/music/mp3. Hope this helps. Oh, and this is under windows 10,
    but I used it like that under Windows 8 as well.

    Annette

    On 10/10/2019 10:16 PM, Rosemarie Chavarria wrote:

        Hi, Arleen,

        I use a program called Anyburn to burn CD's. For ripping I use
        windows media player. Hit your windows logo key and type
        "windows media player" without the quotes and hit enter. I tried
        CDex but found it kind of complicated.

        Rosemarie

        *From:* nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
        [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] *On Behalf Of *Arlene
        *Sent:* Thursday, October 10, 2019 5:39 PM
        *To:* nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
        *Subject:* [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

        Hi list: Arlene here. How does one rip and burn cds with windows
        ten? I was trying to rip a cd with my new win ten computer. I
        have a external disk drive. How does one find windows Media
        player? Do you use it with win ten or can you use other players
        like Winamp or what my computer came with was groove Music. Can
        I rip or burn with any of these players like goldwave groove
        music and winamp?

        Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986>
        for Windows 10



Going to Top/End of Document with Braille Display

kelby carlson <kelbycarlson@...>
 

Is there a way to go to the top and bottom of documents with a Braille display? I am using a BrailleNote Touch, and the typical dot 1-2-3 and 4-5-6 chords do not work. I also do not see this command in the input gestures dialogue.


Auto alt text with Chrome.

 

First, yes, I am well aware this is so Google can get more data from websites. A part of me has trouble caring, honestly. If it results in a free product and free services, well, that's a price I'm more than willing to pay. Anyway, the below is a support page on this new Chrome feature and below the page will be NVDA instructions on how to enable this. I doubt Microsoft will enable this because they are more privacy conscious, but here's instructions anyway.

The support article in question.

NVDA Instructions.

  1. Navigate to a page you know has images without alt text.
  2. get your NVDA cursor to the unlabeled image.
  3. Hit Shift, F10, to bring up the context menu.
  4. Expand the sub-menu, get image descriptions from Google.
  5. Select either only for this site or for all websites. I chose all websites.


Locked OT: Windows 10 update behaving oddly since yesterday - Version 1903 (OS Build 18362.418)

Jacob Kruger
 

Yesterday evening, as I was telling windows 10 to shut down, it informed me that it had to install an update, so I told it to go ahead, and, left it running until it had powered off.


Now, this morning, the start menu, focus returning to things like thunderbird, after I close a message was reading, etc., etc. are not cooperating like they did yesterday.


In case it could make a difference, I tried firing up the latest alpha version of NVDA running in portable mode, but, no change.


In other words, wondering if anyone else is experiencing this, and, if I should try something like a clean install of NVDA, or is this simply the latest tweak to windows 10's own interface - for example, neither windows key + M, or windows key + D will bring focus to the desktop, or minimise all windows, and, if I manage to get focus into the windows status bar, using windows key + B, or by tabbing around a bit, it only seems to allow me to navigate through roundabout 5 icons/items, whereas, if I use the sysTrayList NVDA add-on, then there are 9 of them hovering around there.


In other words, is this a brand new tweak to the windows UI, or is there possibly something else I should try find/correct?


And, asking this here, since I have never had this form of a problem in terms of windows UI interaction before while working with NVDA, so, don't really think there's an issue there, but, don't know where else to ask.

Stay well Jacob Kruger
+2782 413 4791
"Resistance is futile...but, acceptance is versatile..."


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

wayne <greenwood33@...>
 

When you're talking about cdex sometimes there are things you don't think about trying, that would include me. What I'm going to say doesn't work on every program, but it worked with cdex. after downloading the most recent version of cdex, I thought lets just try to unzip it, and of course depending on how the program is packed it will either work or not work. but with cdex it does, so just create a shortcut to the program, put it on your desktop and you're ready to use cdex without spyware. If you want to manipulate the ini file it will be somewhere in your applications folder, most likely. I have had great success with windows 7 and windows 10.

Wayne

----- Original Message -----
From: "Damien Garwood" <damien@...>
To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2019 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda


Hi Arlene,
For ripping, I use GoldWave (goldwave.com). Unfortunately that isn't free, and it isn't a dedicated CD ripper even though it is very good at it.
I used to use the free dedicated ripper CDEX (cdex.mu), until it became riddled with adware. Of course, there is still the portable version, but that is quite a bit older.
Note that these tools cannot burn CD's.
For burning, I have been using a program called CDBurnerXP (cdburnerxp.se) for a while now. Don't get confused by the "XP" in the name - I have successfully used it on Windows 7 and beyond. Note though that the default installer comes with InstallCore (some kind of advertising platform), so to get the clean installer and/or portable version you need to click on the "more download options" link on the download page. That is a free burner that can do everything from CD to DVD, data or audio.
All three tools are more or less totally accessible with NVDA and are, in my view, a lot simpler and a lot more flexible than using Winamp's equivalents or the builtin Windows tools.
Hope this helps.
Cheers,
Damien.

On 11/10/2019 05:02 am, Arlene wrote:
It’s true. This new win ten box came without one. I did have to buy an external cd rom.

Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for Windows 10

*From: *Annette Moore <mailto:angelgirl52376@...>
*Sent: *October 10, 2019 9:00 PM
*To: *nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
*Subject: *Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

Yes, mine did, but this machine is nearly six years old now--my, how time does fly! I hear a lot of the newer ones now don't, though. I'd be lost without a CD Rom drive because my choir music from church still comes on CD's. I suppose, though, I could talk my choir director into getting Dropbox and we could share files that way if necessary, but for now, I can still use and rip the CD's he gives me on this machine using CDEX. that's good you can get external CDRom drives.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:54 PM, Arlene wrote:

Anette, did your computer come with a cd rom drive? This ten box
did not come with one. I did purchase a external cd rom drive.

Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986> for
Windows 10

*From: *Annette Moore <mailto:angelgirl52376@...>
*Sent: *October 10, 2019 8:41 PM
*To: *nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
*Subject: *Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

I use Cdex, but all I do is insert my CD, hit f9 and it starts
ripping. I don't do anything else and I don't know how the program
works aside from that. I find my ripped CD in the mp3 folder under
users/music/mp3. Hope this helps. Oh, and this is under windows 10,
but I used it like that under Windows 8 as well.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:16 PM, Rosemarie Chavarria wrote:

Hi, Arleen,

I use a program called Anyburn to burn CD's. For ripping I use
windows media player. Hit your windows logo key and type
"windows media player" without the quotes and hit enter. I tried
CDex but found it kind of complicated.

Rosemarie

*From:* nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
[mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] *On Behalf Of *Arlene
*Sent:* Thursday, October 10, 2019 5:39 PM
*To:* nvda@nvda.groups.io <mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io>
*Subject:* [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

Hi list: Arlene here. How does one rip and burn cds with windows
ten? I was trying to rip a cd with my new win ten computer. I
have a external disk drive. How does one find windows Media
player? Do you use it with win ten or can you use other players
like Winamp or what my computer came with was groove Music. Can
I rip or burn with any of these players like goldwave groove
music and winamp?

Sent from Mail <https://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=550986>
for Windows 10


Re: talking pe I made severel years back for the winpe project. Hi, if anyone has the talking pe I made that was 64 bit based I would really appreciate and also windows me and xp sound libraries. Thanks

Isaac <bigikemusic@...>
 

It was a talking win pe I made with eloquence but I worked hard and actually made it in 64 bit so it could be used with windows backup and to install a true copy of windows 10 as well.

----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 2:17 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] talking pe I made severel years back for the winpe project. Hi, if anyone has the talking pe I made that was 64 bit based I would really appreciate and also windows me and xp sound libraries. Thanks

Hi


Do you mean Windows PE


If it is that one where you can say prepare it before you put on windows there is a link off my nvda tutorials for other programs page at http://accessibilitycentral.net/nvda%20tutorials%20for%20other%20programs.html

When you get to that page jump down by headings until you get to it.


It looks as though when I looked there is one for windows 7 and 10.


Or is it another program?


Gene nz


On 11/10/2019 8:07 PM, Isaac wrote:
 
--
Check out my website for NVDA tutorials and other blindness related materials at http://www.accessibilitycentral.net

To find out which library networks in New Zealand have a copy of the NVDA screen reader on them and there library locations please go to http://www.accessibilitycentral.net/nz%20libraries%20with%20nvda.html
To find a NVDA certified expert near you, please visit the following link https://certification.nvaccess.org/. The certification page contains the official list of NVDA certified individuals from around the world, who have sat and successfully passed the NVDA expert exam.


Re: talking pe I made severel years back for the winpe project. Hi, if anyone has the talking pe I made that was 64 bit based I would really appreciate and also windows me and xp sound libraries. Thanks

hurrikennyandopo ...
 

Hi


Do you mean Windows PE


If it is that one where you can say prepare it before you put on windows there is a link off my nvda tutorials for other programs page at http://accessibilitycentral.net/nvda%20tutorials%20for%20other%20programs.html

When you get to that page jump down by headings until you get to it.


It looks as though when I looked there is one for windows 7 and 10.


Or is it another program?


Gene nz


On 11/10/2019 8:07 PM, Isaac wrote:
 
--
Check out my website for NVDA tutorials and other blindness related materials at http://www.accessibilitycentral.net

To find out which library networks in New Zealand have a copy of the NVDA screen reader on them and there library locations please go to http://www.accessibilitycentral.net/nz%20libraries%20with%20nvda.html
To find a NVDA certified expert near you, please visit the following link https://certification.nvaccess.org/. The certification page contains the official list of NVDA certified individuals from around the world, who have sat and successfully passed the NVDA expert exam.


talking pe I made severel years back for the winpe project. Hi, if anyone has the talking pe I made that was 64 bit based I would really appreciate and also windows me and xp sound libraries. Thanks

Isaac <bigikemusic@...>
 

 


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

molly the blind tech lover
 

I like talking about this stuff but perhaps we should discuss this in  the chat? We’ve gotten off the subject of NVDA.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Shaun Everiss
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 2:47 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

My workstation is one of those ultra thins, cpu, intergrated video, all amd, and 2 hard drives.

Its a thin but sollid unit.

The newer systems are so thin you can only  get one drive in the cd slot anyway.

The  bigger ones well you can but they are bulky.

Lifting my older unit with a cd drive in it and listening to the sound even with the emulation, made me wander what crap I had before and how crappy it was.

The sound as compaired to my sound I have now was really bad but then I do have good sound now.

The laptop I had before was heavy, this monster doesn't have the video card and features of a gaming system but its got just about everything else.

The only difference is I have a second generation amd r class cpu and not the 3rd gen but thats pritty much it.

 

 

On 11/10/2019 7:15 pm, molly the blind tech lover wrote:

Hi

I didn’t know you could still do that. Without a cd drive my laptop seems very thin and kind of flimsy.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Shaun Everiss
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 2:10 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

You can still buy laptops with cd drives but I would go with the externals if you can.

Firstly there is extra thickness in laptops with drives and its heavier.

The drives are fine a bit faster but its not like you use cds daily mostly anyway.

The portable drive can be used on many devices.

 

 

On 11/10/2019 5:11 pm, molly the blind tech lover wrote:

Hi.

My computer doesn’t have a cd drive either. My mum’s laptop has one, but it’s about seven years old.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 12:03 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

It’s true. This new win ten box came without one.  I did have to buy an external cd rom.

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 9:00 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Yes, mine did, but this machine is nearly six years old now--my, how time does fly! I hear a lot of the newer ones now don't, though. I'd be lost without a CD Rom drive because my choir music from church still comes on CD's. I suppose, though, I could talk my choir director into getting Dropbox and we could share files that way if necessary, but for now, I can still use and rip the CD's he gives me on this machine using CDEX. that's good you can get external CDRom drives.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:54 PM, Arlene wrote:

Anette, did your computer come with a cd rom drive?  This ten box did not come with one. I did purchase a external cd rom drive.  

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 8:41 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

I use Cdex, but all I do is insert my CD, hit f9 and it starts ripping. I don't do anything else and I don't know how the program works aside from that. I find my ripped CD in the mp3 folder under users/music/mp3. Hope this helps. Oh, and this is under windows 10, but I used it like that under Windows 8 as well.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:16 PM, Rosemarie Chavarria wrote:

Hi, Arleen,

 

I use a program called Anyburn to burn CD's. For ripping I use windows media player. Hit your windows logo key and type "windows media player" without the quotes and hit enter. I tried CDex but found it kind of complicated.

 

Rosemarie

 

 

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2019 5:39 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Hi list: Arlene here. How does one rip and burn cds with windows ten? I was trying to rip a cd with my new win ten computer.  I have a external disk drive. How does one find windows Media player? Do you use it with win ten or can you use other players like Winamp or what my computer came with was groove Music. Can I rip or burn with any of these players like goldwave groove music and winamp?

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

 

 


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

My workstation is one of those ultra thins, cpu, intergrated video, all amd, and 2 hard drives.

Its a thin but sollid unit.

The newer systems are so thin you can only  get one drive in the cd slot anyway.

The  bigger ones well you can but they are bulky.

Lifting my older unit with a cd drive in it and listening to the sound even with the emulation, made me wander what crap I had before and how crappy it was.

The sound as compaired to my sound I have now was really bad but then I do have good sound now.

The laptop I had before was heavy, this monster doesn't have the video card and features of a gaming system but its got just about everything else.

The only difference is I have a second generation amd r class cpu and not the 3rd gen but thats pritty much it.



On 11/10/2019 7:15 pm, molly the blind tech lover wrote:

Hi

I didn’t know you could still do that. Without a cd drive my laptop seems very thin and kind of flimsy.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Shaun Everiss
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 2:10 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

You can still buy laptops with cd drives but I would go with the externals if you can.

Firstly there is extra thickness in laptops with drives and its heavier.

The drives are fine a bit faster but its not like you use cds daily mostly anyway.

The portable drive can be used on many devices.

 

 

On 11/10/2019 5:11 pm, molly the blind tech lover wrote:

Hi.

My computer doesn’t have a cd drive either. My mum’s laptop has one, but it’s about seven years old.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 12:03 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

It’s true. This new win ten box came without one.  I did have to buy an external cd rom.

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 9:00 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Yes, mine did, but this machine is nearly six years old now--my, how time does fly! I hear a lot of the newer ones now don't, though. I'd be lost without a CD Rom drive because my choir music from church still comes on CD's. I suppose, though, I could talk my choir director into getting Dropbox and we could share files that way if necessary, but for now, I can still use and rip the CD's he gives me on this machine using CDEX. that's good you can get external CDRom drives.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:54 PM, Arlene wrote:

Anette, did your computer come with a cd rom drive?  This ten box did not come with one. I did purchase a external cd rom drive.  

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 8:41 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

I use Cdex, but all I do is insert my CD, hit f9 and it starts ripping. I don't do anything else and I don't know how the program works aside from that. I find my ripped CD in the mp3 folder under users/music/mp3. Hope this helps. Oh, and this is under windows 10, but I used it like that under Windows 8 as well.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:16 PM, Rosemarie Chavarria wrote:

Hi, Arleen,

 

I use a program called Anyburn to burn CD's. For ripping I use windows media player. Hit your windows logo key and type "windows media player" without the quotes and hit enter. I tried CDex but found it kind of complicated.

 

Rosemarie

 

 

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2019 5:39 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Hi list: Arlene here. How does one rip and burn cds with windows ten? I was trying to rip a cd with my new win ten computer.  I have a external disk drive. How does one find windows Media player? Do you use it with win ten or can you use other players like Winamp or what my computer came with was groove Music. Can I rip or burn with any of these players like goldwave groove music and winamp?

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

 

 


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

molly the blind tech lover
 

Hi

I didn’t know you could still do that. Without a cd drive my laptop seems very thin and kind of flimsy.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Shaun Everiss
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 2:10 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

You can still buy laptops with cd drives but I would go with the externals if you can.

Firstly there is extra thickness in laptops with drives and its heavier.

The drives are fine a bit faster but its not like you use cds daily mostly anyway.

The portable drive can be used on many devices.

 

 

On 11/10/2019 5:11 pm, molly the blind tech lover wrote:

Hi.

My computer doesn’t have a cd drive either. My mum’s laptop has one, but it’s about seven years old.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 12:03 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

It’s true. This new win ten box came without one.  I did have to buy an external cd rom.

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 9:00 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Yes, mine did, but this machine is nearly six years old now--my, how time does fly! I hear a lot of the newer ones now don't, though. I'd be lost without a CD Rom drive because my choir music from church still comes on CD's. I suppose, though, I could talk my choir director into getting Dropbox and we could share files that way if necessary, but for now, I can still use and rip the CD's he gives me on this machine using CDEX. that's good you can get external CDRom drives.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:54 PM, Arlene wrote:

Anette, did your computer come with a cd rom drive?  This ten box did not come with one. I did purchase a external cd rom drive.  

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 8:41 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

I use Cdex, but all I do is insert my CD, hit f9 and it starts ripping. I don't do anything else and I don't know how the program works aside from that. I find my ripped CD in the mp3 folder under users/music/mp3. Hope this helps. Oh, and this is under windows 10, but I used it like that under Windows 8 as well.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:16 PM, Rosemarie Chavarria wrote:

Hi, Arleen,

 

I use a program called Anyburn to burn CD's. For ripping I use windows media player. Hit your windows logo key and type "windows media player" without the quotes and hit enter. I tried CDex but found it kind of complicated.

 

Rosemarie

 

 

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2019 5:39 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Hi list: Arlene here. How does one rip and burn cds with windows ten? I was trying to rip a cd with my new win ten computer.  I have a external disk drive. How does one find windows Media player? Do you use it with win ten or can you use other players like Winamp or what my computer came with was groove Music. Can I rip or burn with any of these players like goldwave groove music and winamp?

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

 

 


Locked Re: ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

You can still buy laptops with cd drives but I would go with the externals if you can.

Firstly there is extra thickness in laptops with drives and its heavier.

The drives are fine a bit faster but its not like you use cds daily mostly anyway.

The portable drive can be used on many devices.



On 11/10/2019 5:11 pm, molly the blind tech lover wrote:

Hi.

My computer doesn’t have a cd drive either. My mum’s laptop has one, but it’s about seven years old.

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Friday, October 11, 2019 12:03 AM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

It’s true. This new win ten box came without one.  I did have to buy an external cd rom.

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 9:00 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Yes, mine did, but this machine is nearly six years old now--my, how time does fly! I hear a lot of the newer ones now don't, though. I'd be lost without a CD Rom drive because my choir music from church still comes on CD's. I suppose, though, I could talk my choir director into getting Dropbox and we could share files that way if necessary, but for now, I can still use and rip the CD's he gives me on this machine using CDEX. that's good you can get external CDRom drives.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:54 PM, Arlene wrote:

Anette, did your computer come with a cd rom drive?  This ten box did not come with one. I did purchase a external cd rom drive.  

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Annette Moore
Sent: October 10, 2019 8:41 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

I use Cdex, but all I do is insert my CD, hit f9 and it starts ripping. I don't do anything else and I don't know how the program works aside from that. I find my ripped CD in the mp3 folder under users/music/mp3. Hope this helps. Oh, and this is under windows 10, but I used it like that under Windows 8 as well.

Annette

On 10/10/2019 10:16 PM, Rosemarie Chavarria wrote:

Hi, Arleen,

 

I use a program called Anyburn to burn CD's. For ripping I use windows media player. Hit your windows logo key and type "windows media player" without the quotes and hit enter. I tried CDex but found it kind of complicated.

 

Rosemarie

 

 

 

From: nvda@nvda.groups.io [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] On Behalf Of Arlene
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2019 5:39 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: [nvda] ripping and burning cds using nvda

 

Hi list: Arlene here. How does one rip and burn cds with windows ten? I was trying to rip a cd with my new win ten computer.  I have a external disk drive. How does one find windows Media player? Do you use it with win ten or can you use other players like Winamp or what my computer came with was groove Music. Can I rip or burn with any of these players like goldwave groove music and winamp?

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10