Posted by: rato
« on: April 18, 2020, 10:50:01 AM »i just realized that you are able to "see" more details than what appears in the screen, some values are rounded to only a few significant digits but your screen reader reads all the digits.
I'm thinking of a few other things that would help immensely. F Shortcuts to open specific window, keyboard shortcuts for various things within those windows, and Abbreviated Labels, so you don't need to have the reader running a billion miles an hour.Good observation, cause i did not try demonstrating creating queues or editing them but as you imagine there's lots of tabbing around when doing so, so shortcuts within windows would help!
I'm thinking of a few other things that would help immensely. F Shortcuts to open specific window, keyboard shortcuts for various things within those windows, and Abbreviated Labels, so you don't need to have the reader running a billion miles an hour.If there is one thing I miss from the previous version, it is definitely those function key shortcuts. I keep reflexively wanting to reach for, say, F7, and coming up short when I realize it isn’t available yet :-)
This is fascinating and awesome. Thanks for sharing.Exactly.
I've a, probably daft, question for you though - when you first load everything up, how do you know where things are? Do you just keep moving around listening to the screen reader until you build up a kind of mental map or...?
Random question:Oh yeah i did it before start recording to make sure it is understandable.
Did you slow down your screen reader just to make the video?
Very interesting. I'm amazed at how you can understand a speaker moving that fast.Oh yeah true, I knew this one but i heard C number from my screen reader so much this week i absolutely forgot about it
I wanted to correct you on something, and I suspect you got this wrong because this is how your screen reader says the word. The language you called "C Number" is actually called "C Sharp". This symbol: "#" is used in music to designate a note as sharp, as opposed to flat, and that's what the name is based on.