there's many ways to search for objects in the universe besides optical telescopes. there is electromagnetic radiation, neutrino detectors, radio waves of varying wavelenghts, infrared radiation, etc... well, just take a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomy#By_methods_ of_data_collection
blind people. i think we all can benefit from this simple and straightforward representation of search results. i actually like the new accessible interface. it was a kind decision by google to not put any ads in their accessible search. i think more people will use the google accessible search than just the blind people. so, has anyone tried using any of the screen reading software to test whether search results are actually readable without looking at the screen? and also what about keyboard shortcuts? since blind people can't use mouse, there must be some other way for them to find a search box / search result, right?
let's not forget about the advantages of buying from allofmp3 versus let's say itunes. i mean, think beyond pricing! while itunes generally locks you in and is very restrictive about rights management, allofmp3 gives you CHOICES of formats, bitrates, even up to original CD-quality, and provides you with a convenient download manager that has offline search capabilities... what you get is what you _bought_, your music, in format/bitrate that you prefer, and as a file that you can decide what to do with... what's not to like about allofmp3???
the case will withstand the explosion, not the ipod itself ;)
there's many ways to search for objects in the universe besides optical telescopes. there is electromagnetic radiation, neutrino detectors, radio waves of varying wavelenghts, infrared radiation, etc... well, just take a look at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astronomy#By_methods_ of_data_collection
blind people. i think we all can benefit from this simple and straightforward representation of search results. i actually like the new accessible interface. it was a kind decision by google to not put any ads in their accessible search. i think more people will use the google accessible search than just the blind people.
so, has anyone tried using any of the screen reading software to test whether search results are actually readable without looking at the screen?
and also what about keyboard shortcuts? since blind people can't use mouse, there must be some other way for them to find a search box / search result, right?
let's not forget about the advantages of buying from allofmp3 versus let's say itunes. i mean, think beyond pricing! while itunes generally locks you in and is very restrictive about rights management, allofmp3 gives you CHOICES of formats, bitrates, even up to original CD-quality, and provides you with a convenient download manager that has offline search capabilities... what you get is what you _bought_, your music, in format/bitrate that you prefer, and as a file that you can decide what to do with... what's not to like about allofmp3???
yeah, I'd RATHER see Avast Antivirus in the package, instead of Norton. Norton is the only "trialware" in the google pack, isn't it?