[stylist] Trying to retrieve attachment
Danielle Montour
dannivoiceangel333 at gmail.com
Mon Oct 11 20:09:21 UTC 2010
Hi Bridgit,
If you want, I can paste the attachment into an Email. However,
above the Email text, there should be a place where it shows the
attachments and download links. I have a hotmail as well. I can
just paste it into another Email if that doesn't work. You can
contact me if you want to retrieve it like that.
HTH
Danielle
----- Original Message -----
From: Bridgit Pollpeter <bpollpeter at hotmail.com
To: <stylist at nfbnet.org
Date sent: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 14:44:56 -0500
Subject: [stylist] Trying to retrieve attachment
Hey guys,
How can I retrieve Daniele's attachment? It does not show up on
my
email as an attachment. There is no download link or anything
similar.
Again, I'm the stupid one with technology! *smile*
Bridgit
-----Original Message-----
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[mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
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Sent: Monday, October 11, 2010 12:00 PM
To: stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: stylist Digest, Vol 78, Issue 16
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Essential Office Tools (Jewel S.)
2. Re: Essential Office Tools (Jewel S.)
3. Re: Essential Office Tools (BDM)
4. Re: Essential Office Tools (Robert Leslie Newman)
5. Short story: warrior (Danielle Montour)
6. Re: Short story: warrior (Joe Orozco)
7. Re: Short story: warrior (Chris Kuell)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-----
Message: 1
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2010 14:08:28 -0400
From: "Jewel S." <herekittykat2 at gmail.com
To: "Writer's Division Mailing List" <stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Essential Office Tools
Message-ID:
<AANLkTi=WvOJAYn=4EweVndQWJVo5qXAmd6PZSmS65uch at mail.gmail.co
m
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
One thing. If you're looking for a fully accessible computer
planner
and/or alarm clock, do a Google search for DaybyDay Planning
Calendar.
This calendar costs about $40 (and you can put it on two
computers),
allows for multiple users, has an address book and reminder
alerts
(alarms), goes from I think 400 A.D. (<_< Yes, I checked...I
wanted to
know!) to past 2400 (that's as far in the future as I went, but
it kept
going!). So, this calendar could also be sued by historians to
keep
track of a timeline, or for a history student to do the same. In
the
present time, it is very useful too! You use very basic hotkeys
(CTRL+A
is to add a note, CTRL+D is to go to the Delete menu options,
etc). You
can move by day, week, month, or year, so for example, I wanted
to put
in birthdays, and I put them in for 2010, then moved by year and
added
them each year for like 10 years! I'm not going to have to worry
about
not knowing when birthdays are for a whole decade now!
This program is usable with Windows (I don't know about Mac). It
is
compatible with JAWS and WindowEyes (I think that's what the
other one
is called?). It is also partially compatible with NVDA (the
address book
edit fields don't tell you what each one is for, and you have to
tab
onto the date to read it, but otherwise, I've not seen any
problems
using DaybyDay with NVDA, and I do it every day). This planning
calendar
is amazing and fully accessible, having been designed by a
totally
blind programmer. I definitely recommend it!
The same programmer (just look on the website for DaybyDay) has
other
programs, including a clock program that is fully accessible
(since it's
made by th e same totally blind programmer). It can do alarms (I
don't
know what the limit is, it's too large...I tried, and didn't
reach the
limit!), and has a really cool feature that I loved when I wasn't
at my
computer (it's too loud when I am at the computer). You can set
it to
speak the time, yes, but I much prefer the Big Ben choice. On
the hour,
it does the full song and a chime per hour (1:00, 1 chime, and so
on).
You can tell it if you want it to go off on the half hour and
quarter
hours or not, also. It can do a short chime on the quarter
hours, and a
longer chime on the half hour, but you can turn these off if you
don't
want them. I have found that a grandfather clock on my computer
reminding me of the time while I'm reading is great, because then
I
notice, hey it's 7pm, time to get dinner ready or such like that.
other office tools I find essential.
-A handheld massager from Bookstone. This little vibrator is
very
compact, easy to stick in a desk drawer and very light. It runs
on two
double-A batteries, and has a single setting. Because my muscles
are so
sensitive, this single setting is perfect for me, as it has a
light
touch. It works great when you sat at the computer too long and
strained
your neck. The curvature of the device means it will even sit on
your
shoulder if you place it right, and work hands-free, so you can
keep
working! -An index card box. It's a little box made of plastic
with a
flap that snaps down (some nicer ones have a zipper or a snap
latch). I
keep a stylus in there with the index cars and a Jannus (sp?)
slate
nearby. If I need to take a note (someone's address, phone
number, where
so-and-so left my papers, or what this book sitting in front of
me is
that I need to scan). I write up the note, and the notes for the
book
get put on with tape or a paperclip (hardback versus paperback),
and the
addresses, phone numbers, and little notes like that can go in an
open
box on the desk to be sorted at the end of the day. An important
notecard could be taped to the bottom of the keyboard at the
frong,
where it'll stick out and I'll touch it every time I type.
Another
location for notes like this is hanging from the underside of the
desk
at the frong. Every time you sit down, you're likely to brush
against
them. No more out of sight, out of mind to worry about! -My desk
doesn't
have a drawer for stuff, just for the computer, so I have a
fabric box
on the top of my desk for stuff (a nice looking one from Ikea).
It holds
tape dispenser, paperclip jar, rubber band jar, scissors,
hole-puncher
(one- and three-hole), , slate (the regular size one, not the
Jannus
slate, since the Jannus stays out for quick grab), a jar with
extra
styli (you never know!), extra packets of index cards, stamps, a
few
pens and pencils and a highlighter for other people to use, twist
ties
for cords and cables, Krammer abacus, talking calculator, and a
few
other items I can't remember...oh yea, gum! Gotta have gum.
Then, when I need something, I just stick my hand in, feel around
for
the right shape and grab. Everything's a different shape and
texture, so
I can grab quickly. -Bumpdots and circle felt stickers. I have
found
these to be essential, not just for labelling. If I'm reading a
Braille
document and I want to 'highlight' something, I put a small
circle felt
dot sticker right before the beginning and end of what I want
highlighted. if I'm reading a magazine that I know I won't read
all the
articles in (say , for example, PC World [which I don't get]), I
can put
a felt circle or small bumpdot next to the articles in the table
of
contents that I want to come back to and read).
That's all I can think of for now...
On 10/10/10, BDM <lists at braddunsemusic.com> wrote:
Joe,
These are my few essential items:
1. File Management: I'm not afraid to create folders on my
computer,
and try to maintain them in a very organized manner. . I find
the
need to clean house once and a while when in a hurry creating
and
though it takes a little time, I take it.
2. Digital Recorder: A super help is a digital recorder, my
electronic
brain, my notepad of sourts. I have two of these. One cheaper
one I
bought for like $40 which is an Olympus model and is easy to use
with
no speech menus. I use it to keep numbers on the fly, notes
about my
business on the fly, I use it like an inventory sheet in my
business
marking down what I need where, I use it for anything I don't
wish to
forget or need to mark down in a hurry. I'll use it to mark
down song
titles, lines, melodies, etc. as well on the fly. The other
one I have
is a more expensive Olympus one that records in WAV format if
you
wish. I use it as both a computer microphone at times as well
to note
songs I'm working on, record conferences, live song evaluations,
and
etc. I couldn't live without one these days. A note that if
you have
a Victor Stream you can also use it for audio recorded notes
too. I've
also used the Stream to serve as note promptors when doing a
class on
songwriting. I made a txt file of my notes and put it on the
Stream
and covertly used a ear bud as a promptor. I similarly use my
digital
recorder as my set list promptor on long gigs of two hours or
more.
Everyone thinks its a sound system ear monitor :).
3. Day Timer: Probably one of my biggest things is my day
timer.
Anytime I need to be reminded of something, an appointment, a
special
day or To Do item, I'll enter it in there, have it remind me
ahead of
time and even send me an email as well pop an alert on my
screen. It
keeps my contacts, notes and details for my address book or To
Do
items and everything else. It has calendar, address book,
expense
view, glances or views by day, week, month, year and other
stuff, some
not accessible but I don't use them anyway so that's cool. The
program is one that use to be supported by Jaws, no longer
formally is
but it still works if you have the old scripts. It is Anytime
Organizer. I will say the latest version I had tried, version
13, did
not agree with my system and I am running version 12 which works
great
and I will probably not change unless major tweaks are made
from my
version. Though I've found their customer service to be
atrocious, I
still love the program and it is one of which that has kept me
from
converting to a Mac, which I am yet seriously considering. I
just need
to find a Mac anser to this and be open minded to a different,
yet
free screen reader :). I also occasionally use a free and
fairly
accessible program called Alarm Clock By Terry. It serves as a
countdown timer as well an alarm clock on board. It is pretty
accessible. I looked forever to find one that wasn't totally
graphical
and it wasnt' easy. This one has a couple buttons not labeled
but
other than that its fine.
4. Braille Tags: I am not a big Braille reader, I have trouble
falling
asleep trying to read it for any length of time , but I do use
it
around the office. I use old business cards I have and make
notes to
print papered items if I just need to file or otherwise deal
with
them.
5. Clips: One last thing I'll mention since I use to use this
and it
worked great the way I was running my business/office then. I
bought
some of those paper clips that from a profile view are shaped
like a
triangle and have two foldable wire handles on them. You can
afix
Braille dymo tape numbers to them. I'd have my reader go
through and
read a certain mail item or papered item on to a digital
recorder
starting off "Item #1:" and proceed to read it. This way I
could go
and file or attend to it later when I had time and not pay
someone to
do that for me.
Hope that helps.
Brad
At 09:16 AM 10/10/2010, Joe Orozco wrote:
Dear all,
I'm curious about what people think are the essential office
tools for
writers who are blind. Our sighted counterparts keep notepads,
paper
files, bulletin boards and all manner of things to keep things
organized and spread
out through their office. Last year when I switched jobs and
took one
where
I have the luxury of working from home, I was a little pleased
and
somewhat
disappointed to realize that the two main information storage
devices
I
needed was a laptop and an external hard drive. I recently
invested
in an
embosser for those times when I'd like to be able to read hard
copy,
but I
somehow don't see pasting Braille stickies on a board as all that
productive, out of sight is out of mind and so forth. The
trouble
with
working primarily from home is that the work is always there.
Similarly,
working out of a single laptop makes it seem as though my work
has
never
really disappeared after 6:00 PM. I suppose I should accepted
when my
office tried to buy me a Mac. It's not too late, but I'm not
ready to
explore a new operating system. So what do you use to keep
things
compartmentalized and organized in your office? Any tips and
tricks
would
be appreciated. I'm reading this time-management book and want
to see
if
there's a different way of arranging my information to boost
general
productivity. Thanks much in advance.
Best,
Joe
"Hard work spotlights the character of people: some turn up their
sleeves, some turn up their noses, and some don't turn up at
all."--Sam Ewing
_______________________________________________
Writers Division web site: http://www.nfb-writers-division.org
<http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/
stylist mailing list
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http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/stylist_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info
for
stylist:
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bradd
unsemusic.com
__________ Information from ESET Smart Security, version of virus
signature database 5518 (20101009) __________
The message was checked by ESET Smart Security.
http://www.eset.com
Brad Dunse
Check out my blog at: http://www.braddunsemusic.com
E Mail: brad at braddunsemusic.com
Website: http://www.braddunsemusic.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=1464323555
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/braddunse
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/braddunse
_______________________________________________
Writers Division web site: http://www.nfb-writers-division.org
<http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/
stylist mailing list
stylist at nfbnet.org
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/stylist_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account
info for
stylist:
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/options/stylist_nfbnet.org/herekitt
ykat2
%40gmail.com
--
~Jewel
Check out my blog about accessibility for the blind!
Treasure Chest for the Blind:
http://blindtreasurechest.blogspot.com
------------------------------
Message: 2
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2010 14:08:59 -0400
From: "Jewel S." <herekittykat2 at gmail.com
To: "Writer's Division Mailing List" <stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Essential Office Tools
Message-ID:
<AANLkTik6zXXXjKXkLgcsJ_BrLwcg=Twp9=HNo5kAjY_8 at mail.gmail.co
m
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
On 10/10/10, BDM <lists at braddunsemusic.com> wrote:
Joe,
These are my few essential items:
1. File Management: I'm not afraid to create folders on my
computer,
and try to maintain them in a very organized manner. . I find
the
need to clean house once and a while when in a hurry creating
and
though it takes a little time, I take it.
2. Digital Recorder: A super help is a digital recorder, my
electronic
brain, my notepad of sourts. I have two of these. One cheaper
one I
bought for like $40 which is an Olympus model and is easy to use
with
no speech menus. I use it to keep numbers on the fly, notes
about my
business on the fly, I use it like an inventory sheet in my
business
marking down what I need where, I use it for anything I don't
wish to
forget or need to mark down in a hurry. I'll use it to mark
down song
titles, lines, melodies, etc. as well on the fly. The other
one I have
is a more expensive Olympus one that records in WAV format if
you
wish. I use it as both a computer microphone at times as well
to note
songs I'm working on, record conferences, live song evaluations,
and
etc. I couldn't live without one these days. A note that if
you have
a Victor Stream you can also use it for audio recorded notes
too. I've
also used the Stream to serve as note promptors when doing a
class on
songwriting. I made a txt file of my notes and put it on the
Stream
and covertly used a ear bud as a promptor. I similarly use my
digital
recorder as my set list promptor on long gigs of two hours or
more.
Everyone thinks its a sound system ear monitor :).
3. Day Timer: Probably one of my biggest things is my day
timer.
Anytime I need to be reminded of something, an appointment, a
special
day or To Do item, I'll enter it in there, have it remind me
ahead of
time and even send me an email as well pop an alert on my
screen. It
keeps my contacts, notes and details for my address book or To
Do
items and everything else. It has calendar, address book,
expense
view, glances or views by day, week, month, year and other
stuff, some
not accessible but I don't use them anyway so that's cool. The
program is one that use to be supported by Jaws, no longer
formally is
but it still works if you have the old scripts. It is Anytime
Organizer. I will say the latest version I had tried, version
13, did
not agree with my system and I am running version 12 which works
great
and I will probably not change unless major tweaks are made
from my
version. Though I've found their customer service to be
atrocious, I
still love the program and it is one of which that has kept me
from
converting to a Mac, which I am yet seriously considering. I
just need
to find a Mac anser to this and be open minded to a different,
yet
free screen reader :). I also occasionally use a free and
fairly
accessible program called Alarm Clock By Terry. It serves as a
countdown timer as well an alarm clock on board. It is pretty
accessible. I looked forever to find one that wasn't totally
graphical
and it wasnt' easy. This one has a couple buttons not labeled
but
other than that its fine.
4. Braille Tags: I am not a big Braille reader, I have trouble
falling
asleep trying to read it for any length of time , but I do use
it
around the office. I use old business cards I have and make
notes to
print papered items if I just need to file or otherwise deal
with
them.
5. Clips: One last thing I'll mention since I use to use this
and it
worked great the way I was running my business/office then. I
bought
some of those paper clips that from a profile view are shaped
like a
triangle and have two foldable wire handles on them. You can
afix
Braille dymo tape numbers to them. I'd have my reader go
through and
read a certain mail item or papered item on to a digital
recorder
starting off "Item #1:" and proceed to read it. This way I
could go
and file or attend to it later when I had time and not pay
someone to
do that for me.
Hope that helps.
Brad
At 09:16 AM 10/10/2010, Joe Orozco wrote:
Dear all,
I'm curious about what people think are the essential office
tools for
writers who are blind. Our sighted counterparts keep notepads,
paper
files, bulletin boards and all manner of things to keep things
organized and spread
out through their office. Last year when I switched jobs and
took one
where
I have the luxury of working from home, I was a little pleased
and
somewhat
disappointed to realize that the two main information storage
devices
I
needed was a laptop and an external hard drive. I recently
invested
in an
embosser for those times when I'd like to be able to read hard
copy,
but I
somehow don't see pasting Braille stickies on a board as all that
productive, out of sight is out of mind and so forth. The
trouble
with
working primarily from home is that the work is always there.
Similarly,
working out of a single laptop makes it seem as though my work
has
never
really disappeared after 6:00 PM. I suppose I should accepted
when my
office tried to buy me a Mac. It's not too late, but I'm not
ready to
explore a new operating system. So what do you use to keep
things
compartmentalized and organized in your office? Any tips and
tricks
would
be appreciated. I'm reading this time-management book and want
to see
if
there's a different way of arranging my information to boost
general
productivity. Thanks much in advance.
Best,
Joe
"Hard work spotlights the character of people: some turn up their
sleeves, some turn up their noses, and some don't turn up at
all."--Sam Ewing
_______________________________________________
Writers Division web site: http://www.nfb-writers-division.org
<http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/
stylist mailing list
stylist at nfbnet.org
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/stylist_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account info
for
stylist:
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/options/stylist_nfbnet.org/lists%40
bradd
unsemusic.com
__________ Information from ESET Smart Security, version of virus
signature database 5518 (20101009) __________
The message was checked by ESET Smart Security.
http://www.eset.com
Brad Dunse
Check out my blog at: http://www.braddunsemusic.com
E Mail: brad at braddunsemusic.com
Website: http://www.braddunsemusic.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=1464323555
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/braddunse
MySpace: http://www.myspace.com/braddunse
_______________________________________________
Writers Division web site: http://www.nfb-writers-division.org
<http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/
stylist mailing list
stylist at nfbnet.org
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/listinfo/stylist_nfbnet.org
To unsubscribe, change your list options or get your account
info for
stylist:
http://www.nfbnet.org/mailman/options/stylist_nfbnet.org/herekitt
ykat2
%40gmail.com
--
~Jewel
Check out my blog about accessibility for the blind!
Treasure Chest for the Blind:
http://blindtreasurechest.blogspot.com
------------------------------
Message: 3
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2010 14:15:11 -0500
From: BDM <lists at braddunsemusic.com
To: Writer's Division Mailing List <stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Essential Office Tools
Message-ID:
<6.2.3.4.2.20101010141350.02c0f170 at www.braddunsemusic.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"; format=flowed
Jewel,
I did a search but couldn't come up with anything by that name.
Do
you have the name of the person, or perhaps in the help menu
there's
a web address for the program
Thanks.
Brad
Brad
At 01:08 PM 10/10/2010, you wrote:
One thing. If you're looking for a fully accessible computer
planner
and/or alarm clock, do a Google search for DaybyDay Planning
Calendar.
This calendar costs about $40 (and you can put it on two
computers),
allows for multiple users, has an address book and reminder
alerts
(alarms), goes from I think 400 A.D. (<_< Yes, I checked...I
wanted to
know!) to past 2400 (that's as far in the future as I went, but
it kept
going!). So, this calendar could also be sued by historians to
keep
track of a timeline, or for a history student to do the same. In
the
present time, it is very useful too! You use very basic hotkeys
(CTRL+A
is to add a note, CTRL+D is to go to the Delete menu options,
etc). You
can move by day, week, month, or year, so for example, I wanted
to put
in birthdays, and I put them in for 2010, then moved by year and
added
them each year for like 10 years! I'm not going to have to worry
about
not knowing when birthdays are for a whole decade now!
This program is usable with Windows (I don't know about Mac). It
is
compatible with JAWS and WindowEyes (I think that's what the
other one
is called?). It is also partially compatible with NVDA (the
address
book edit fields don't tell you what each one is for, and you
have to
tab onto the date to read it, but otherwise, I've not seen any
problems
using DaybyDay with NVDA, and I do it every day). This planning
calendar is amazing and fully accessible, having been designed by
a
totally blind programmer. I definitely recommend it!
The same programmer (just look on the website for DaybyDay) has
other
programs, including a clock program that is fully accessible
(since
it's made by th e same totally blind programmer). It can do
alarms (I
don't know what the limit is, it's too large...I tried, and
didn't
reach the limit!), and has a really cool feature that I loved
when I
wasn't at my computer (it's too loud when I am at the computer).
You
can set it to speak the time, yes, but I much prefer the Big Ben
choice. On the hour, it does the full song and a chime per hour
(1:00,
1 chime, and so on). You can tell it if you want it to go off on
the
half hour and quarter hours or not, also. It can do a short
chime on
the quarter hours, and a longer chime on the half hour, but you
can
turn these off if you don't want them. I have found that a
grandfather
clock on my computer reminding me of the time while I'm reading
is
great, because then I notice, hey it's 7pm, time to get dinner
ready or
such like that.
other office tools I find essential.
-A handheld massager from Bookstone. This little vibrator is
very
compact, easy to stick in a desk drawer and very light. It runs
on two
double-A batteries, and has a single setting. Because my muscles
are so
sensitive, this single setting is perfect for me, as it has a
light
touch. It works great when you sat at the computer too long and
strained your neck. The curvature of the device means it will
even sit
on your shoulder if you place it right, and work hands-free, so
you can
keep working! -An index card box. It's a little box made of
plastic
with a flap that snaps down (some nicer ones have a zipper or a
snap
latch). I keep a stylus in there with the index cars and a
Jannus (sp?)
slate nearby. If I need to take a note (someone's address, phone
number, where so-and-so left my papers, or what this book sitting
in
front of me is that I need to scan). I write up the note, and
the notes
for the book get put on with tape or a paperclip (hardback versus
paperback), and the addresses, phone numbers, and little notes
like
that can go in an open box on the desk to be sorted at the end of
the
day. An important notecard could be taped to the bottom of the
keyboard
at the frong, where it'll stick out and I'll touch it every time
I
type. Another location for notes like this is hanging from the
underside of the desk at the frong. Every time you sit down,
you're
likely to brush against them. No more out of sight, out of mind
to
worry about! -My desk doesn't have a drawer for stuff, just for
the
computer, so I have a fabric box on the top of my desk for stuff
(a
nice looking one from Ikea). It holds tape dispenser, paperclip
jar,
rubber band jar, scissors, hole-puncher (one- and three-hole), ,
slate
(the regular size one, not the Jannus slate, since the Jannus
stays out
for quick grab), a jar with extra styli (you never know!), extra
packets of index cards, stamps, a few pens and pencils and a
highlighter for other people to use, twist ties for cords and
cables,
Krammer abacus, talking calculator, and a few other items I can't
remember...oh yea, gum! Gotta have gum.
Then, when I need something, I just stick my hand in, feel around
for
the right shape and grab. Everything's a different shape and
texture,
so I can grab quickly. -Bumpdots and circle felt stickers. I
have found
these to be essential, not just for labelling. If I'm reading a
Braille
document and I want to 'highlight' something, I put a small
circle felt
dot sticker right before the beginning and end of what I want
highlighted. if I'm reading a magazine that I know I won't read
all the
articles in (say , for example, PC World [which I don't get]), I
can
put a felt circle or small bumpdot next to the articles in the
table of
contents that I want to come back to and read).
That's all I can think of for now...
On 10/10/10, BDM <lists at braddunsemusic.com> wrote:
Joe,
These are my few essential items:
1. File Management: I'm not afraid to create folders on my
computer,
and try to maintain them in a very organized manner. . I find
the
need to clean house once and a while when in a hurry creating
and
though it takes a little time, I take it.
2. Digital Recorder: A super help is a digital recorder, my
electronic brain, my notepad of sourts. I have two of these.
One
cheaper one I bought for like $40 which is an Olympus model and
is
easy to use with no speech menus. I use it to keep numbers on
the
fly, notes about my business on the fly, I use it like an
inventory
sheet in my business marking down what I need where, I use it
for
anything I don't wish to forget or need to mark down in a hurry.
I'll use it to mark down song titles, lines, melodies, etc. as
well
on the fly. The other one I have is a more expensive Olympus
one
that records in WAV format if you wish. I use it as both a
computer
microphone at times as well to note songs I'm working on, record
conferences, live song evaluations, and etc. I couldn't live
without one these days. A note that if you have a Victor Stream
you
can also use it for audio recorded notes too. I've also used
the
Stream to serve as note promptors when doing a class on
songwriting.
I made a txt file of my notes and put it on the Stream and
covertly
used a ear bud as a promptor. I similarly use my digital
recorder as
my set list promptor on long gigs of two hours or more.
Everyone
thinks its a sound system ear monitor :).
3. Day Timer: Probably one of my biggest things is my day
timer.
Anytime I need to be reminded of something, an appointment, a
special day or To Do item, I'll enter it in there, have it
remind me
ahead of time and even send me an email as well pop an alert on
my
screen. It keeps my contacts, notes and details for my address
book
or To Do items and everything else. It has calendar, address
book,
expense view, glances or views by day, week, month, year and
other
stuff, some not accessible but I don't use them anyway so that's
cool. The program is one that use to be supported by Jaws, no
longer formally is but it still works if you have the old
scripts.
It is Anytime Organizer. I will say the latest version I had
tried,
version 13, did not agree with my system and I am running
version 12
which works great and I will probably not change unless major
tweaks
are made from my version. Though I've found their customer
service
to be atrocious, I still love the program and it is one of which
that has kept me from converting to a Mac, which I am yet
seriously
considering. I just need to find a Mac anser to this and be
open
minded to a different, yet free screen reader :). I also
occasionally use a free and fairly accessible program called
Alarm
Clock By Terry. It serves as a countdown timer as well an alarm
clock on board. It is pretty accessible. I looked forever to
find
one that wasn't totally graphical and it wasnt' easy. This one
has a
couple buttons not labeled but other than that its fine.
4. Braille Tags: I am not a big Braille reader, I have trouble
falling asleep trying to read it for any length of time , but I
do
use it around the office. I use old business cards I have and
make
notes to print papered items if I just need to file or otherwise
deal with them.
5. Clips: One last thing I'll mention since I use to use this
and it
worked great the way I was running my business/office then. I
bought
some of those paper clips that from a profile view are shaped
like
a triangle and have two foldable wire handles on them. You can
afix
Braille dymo tape numbers to them. I'd have my reader go
through and
read a certain mail item or papered item on to a digital
recorder
starting off "Item #1:" and proceed to read it. This way I
could go
and file or attend to it later when I had time and not pay
someone
to do that for me.
Hope that helps.
Brad
At 09:16 AM 10/10/2010, Joe Orozco wrote:
Dear all,
I'm curious about what people think are the essential office
tools
for writers who are blind. Our sighted counterparts keep
notepads,
paper files, bulletin boards and all manner of things to keep
things organized and spread
out through their office. Last year when I switched jobs and
took
one
where
I have the luxury of working from home, I was a little pleased
and
somewhat
disappointed to realize that the two main information storage
devices I
needed was a laptop and an external hard drive. I recently
invested
in an
embosser for those times when I'd like to be able to read hard
copy,
but I
somehow don't see pasting Braille stickies on a board as all that
productive, out of sight is out of mind and so forth. The
trouble
with
working primarily from home is that the work is always there.
Similarly,
working out of a single laptop makes it seem as though my work
has
never
really disappeared after 6:00 PM. I suppose I should accepted
when
my
office tried to buy me a Mac. It's not too late, but I'm not
ready
to
explore a new operating system. So what do you use to keep
things
compartmentalized and organized in your office? Any tips and
tricks
would
be appreciated. I'm reading this time-management book and want
to
see if
there's a different way of arranging my information to boost
general
productivity. Thanks much in advance.
Best,
Joe
"Hard work spotlights the character of people: some turn up their
sleeves, some turn up their noses, and some don't turn up at
all."--Sam Ewing
_______________________________________________
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signature database 5518 (20101009) __________
The message was checked by ESET Smart Security.
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Brad Dunse
Check out my blog at: http://www.braddunsemusic.com
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Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=1464323555
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_______________________________________________
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--
~Jewel
Check out my blog about accessibility for the blind!
Treasure Chest for the Blind:
http://blindtreasurechest.blogspot.com
_______________________________________________
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<http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/
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__________ Information from ESET Smart Security, version of virus
signature database 5518 (20101009) __________
The message was checked by ESET Smart Security.
http://www.eset.com
Brad Dunse
The greatest composer does not sit down to work because he is
inspired,
but becomes inspired because he is working
E Mail: brad at braddunsemusic.com
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Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=1464323555
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------------------------------
Message: 4
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2010 14:23:17 -0500
From: "Robert Leslie Newman" <newmanrl at cox.net
To: <jsorozco at gmail.com>, "'Writer's Division Mailing List'"
<stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Essential Office Tools
Message-ID: <008e01cb68b0$979ea340$c6dbe9c0$@cox.net
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Joe and others- To keep something in my face, a "to do list," I
use 3 by
5 cards and Braille a single task on each one. I have an old
fashion
spike that I poke them down onto.
I also to remind me, I use the calendar in Outlook and sometimes
Tasks,
which is found within Windows.
IN working up a draft of a new article, writing project, I'll
often
start it in my PAC Mate or net book, then polish it in the
desktop. I
always do my last editing on the Braille display (there is where
you can
see your words as they appear within a sentence, you can make
sure of
what is capitalized or not, what the punctuation looks like, the
formatting can be checked out.
I've also used my Victor Stream as a recorder too capture my
thoughts as
I run; I carry it in my hand and hold it up to my mouth when I
feel the
words a flowing.
And soon, I will be retired and I'm thinking that I'll be
doing
even more organizing and pushing the technology, both hard and
soft.
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org
[mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Joe Orozco
Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2010 9:17 AM
To: 'Writer's Division Mailing List'
Subject: [stylist] Essential Office Tools
Dear all,
I'm curious about what people think are the essential office
tools for
writers who are blind. Our sighted counterparts keep notepads,
paper
files, bulletin boards and all manner of things to keep things
organized
and spread out through their office. Last year when I switched
jobs and
took one where I have the luxury of working from home, I was a
little
pleased and somewhat disappointed to realize that the two main
information storage devices I needed was a laptop and an external
hard
drive. I recently invested in an embosser for those times when
I'd like
to be able to read hard copy, but I somehow don't see pasting
Braille
stickies on a board as all that productive, out of sight is out
of mind
and so forth. The trouble with working primarily from home is
that the
work is always there. Similarly, working out of a single laptop
makes
it seem as though my work has never really disappeared after 6:00
PM. I
suppose I should accepted when my office tried to buy me a Mac.
It's
not too late, but I'm not ready to explore a new operating
system. So
what do you use to keep things compartmentalized and organized in
your
office? Any tips and tricks would be appreciated. I'm reading
this
time-management book and want to see if there's a different way
of
arranging my information to boost general productivity. Thanks
much in
advance.
Best,
Joe
"Hard work spotlights the character of people: some turn up their
sleeves, some turn up their noses, and some don't turn up at
all."--Sam
Ewing
_______________________________________________
Writers Division web site:
http://www.nfb-writers-division.org
<http://www.nfb-writers-division.org/
stylist mailing list
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%40cox.
net
------------------------------
Message: 5
Date: Sun, 10 Oct 2010 20:52:47 -0400
From: Danielle Montour <dannivoiceangel333 at gmail.com
To: Writer's Division Mailing List <stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: [stylist] Short story: warrior
Message-ID: <4cb25fee.8482e50a.1d89.ffffa6eb at mx.google.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"; Format="flowed"
Hi,
I wrote this story two years ago when I was 11, and I want to
improve it. I still want to keep it a short story, I just want
to make it better. Could anyone help me with this? Also, if I'm
not supposed to send attachments to this list, I'm sorry. I
never heard I couldn't, so I'm assuming that it's ok.
Danielle
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------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 08:26:22 -0400
From: "Joe Orozco" <jsorozco at gmail.com
To: "'Writer's Division Mailing List'" <stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Short story: warrior
Message-ID: <E380573AD34E4279A14CC35AE2951C4D at Rufus
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII"
Danielle,
Excellent writing for an eleven-year-old. It seems you sent us a
portion of the story? I would give some more information about
the
girl, perhaps more clues about why she was on the battlefield and
at
least a hint of what she might've been looking for. I think she
may've
been looking for her father, given how the story ended, but the
guy
picking her up seems like a random act until we discover later
that he's
in fact her father. The setting leads me to believe we're
talking about
an earlier time given the choice of horses and weapons. Finally,
the
reason I asked if this might be a portion is because of the
epilogue.
Is this perhaps a novel you started? Great job so far. Keep it
up.
Best,
Joe
"Hard work spotlights the character of people: some turn up their
sleeves, some turn up their noses, and some don't turn up at
all."--Sam
Ewing
-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org
[mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Danielle Montour
Sent: Sunday, October 10, 2010 8:53 PM
To: Writer's Division Mailing List
Subject: [stylist] Short story: warrior
Hi,
I wrote this story two years ago when I was 11, and I want to
improve it. I still want to keep it a short story, I just want
to make it better. Could anyone help me with this? Also, if I'm
not supposed to send attachments to this list, I'm sorry. I
never heard I couldn't, so I'm assuming that it's ok.
Danielle
------------------------------
Message: 7
Date: Mon, 11 Oct 2010 10:00:24 -0400
From: "Chris Kuell" <ckuell at comcast.net
To: "Writer's Division Mailing List" <stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] Short story: warrior
Message-ID: <A9D4F0F926FD45AFA59399A2D4A6B820 at ChrisPC
Content-Type: text/plain; format=flowed; charset="iso-8859-1";
reply-type=original
Hi Danielle,
Thanks for sharing your story with us. You write very well, and
personally,
I don't think this story needs a lot of work. Below I'll make
some
general
comments for you to consider.
Firstly, I commend you for writing in the second person. Hardly
any
books or
stories are written in this point of view, as it's hard to do and
hold
the
reader's attention. Since your story is pretty short, and
exciting, you
managed to hold my attention the whole way through.
If you were at the battlefield that day, you would've heard a
battle
cry... - Your writing has a formal voice, so I would recommend
not using
the
contraction, 'would've' and go with 'would have' instead.
You would hear the guns and muskets... - Since you are telling
your
story in
the past tense, you need to keep that consistent. So this should
read
'you
would have heard...
Soldiers alongside every human soldier on the battlefield.- I get
what
you
mean here, that the guns and sounds are like soldiers themselves,
but
still,
I found this sentence a little awkward. Perhaps Sensory soldiers
alongside...? Or maybe, The war itself a soldier alongside...?
All men are fighting for everything they've lived for, and for
everything
their children will live for and pass down generations to their
grandchildren.- this sentence is a little clunky, and I think
'generations'
is the problem--you don't really need it. If you want to keep
it,
consider :
All men are fighting for everything they've ever lived for, for
everything
their children and grandchildren will live for and pass down
through the
generations .
Readers will likely be interested in when your story takes place.
Horses
and
guns and the United States makes me think of civil or
revolutionary war,
but
since it's an attack on the US, I'd say it must be the
revolutionary
war--although in that war there weren't really attacks on
America, as
America didn't exist yet and was merely a colony. The colony was
under
attack by England and the Hessian soldiers the Brits paid to
fight for
them.
There were attacks on Boston, on Manhattan, on various forts,
etc... and
you
might want to clarify this. A simple red coat or British flag
would
help, as
would a short (3 to 5 words) description of what the little girl
was
wearing.
Good fiction is a balance between character, plot and setting.
I'd like
to
see you add just a touch of setting to help ground the reader in
the
place
and time of your story.
It seemed to be familiar to er, as if she had known for a long
time.-
this
sentence is incomplete, you need to tell us what she knew for a
long
time.
We can infer it was the voice, but we can't be sure. Consider :
It drew
her
in, a familiar, gruff baritone , long distant in her memory -
something
like
that.
Watch out for the word 'seemed', which you use quite often, and
should
try
to avoid. Fiction writers need to be firm and concrete. For
example:
Danielle took a bite of toast. Or, Danielle seemed to take a
bite of
what
seemed to be toast.This isn't the best example, but the second
sentence
is
wordy and less definitive.
(consider a sentence where the soldier drops to one knee after
being
shot,
maybe touches the wound in his neck, grits his teeth, gets up and
keeps
going) He tried to run, tried (to) protect this young girl in
his
arms.
Tried to protect her every being (this sentence says pretty much
the
same
thing as the previous one, so either delete it or change it to
make it
different). He ran, lurched (and) tripped toward the tents where
he
could
lay her down and make sure she was safe.
Stories this short don't usually have epilogues. Those are
generally for
novels or 'longer' short stories. Some writers will separate
sections of
text by using asterisks * * *, but in this case, I don't think
you
really
need that. You could simply start your next paragraph as you do,
and it
will
become apparent to the reader that time has passed. I'd also
recommend
deleting 'approximately'. Again, fiction writers need to be
concrete,
not
wishy-washy. Say, Four years later..., or Four years and two
months
later...
which make the story more real to your readers.
Finally, I'm not sure why you ended with a question mark. I'd go
with a
period.
Nice job, and thanks again for letting us read your work.
chris
------------------------------
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End of stylist Digest, Vol 78, Issue 16
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