As others have now said, VO is pre-installed on MacBooks as it is on all other
Apple products. I moved to Mac in 2011 so not sure how up-to-date I am on how
it works out of the box but I think you may be offered the opportunity of both
going through a quick start VO tutorial and also of turning VO off. Decisions
you then have to make include whether you’re going to do as I did and just run
with the native Mac OS and apps or whether you’re going to put something like
MS Office on the mac. Personally I’ve always regarded that as rather counter
productive not least because office is said not to work particularly happily in
the Mac environment. You also have to decide whether you’re going to keep a PC
running while you learn the Mac. I made the decision to go cold turkey and
quite soon found the Mac to be more intuitive and less hassle. The other thing
to say is to make use of good resources such as Podcasts like the basic ones
provided by David Woodbridge at Vision Australia which were invaluable to me
and the slightly less entry level ones done last year by David Griffiths. Also
use the Mac experience which exists on lists like this and never think that any
question is thick.
On 21 Apr 2016, at 14:20, Spring Flower
<spring.flower@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:spring.flower@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
vid Griffiths
hi
how accessible are mac laptps, i assume that they'll come with voice over
already loaded as is the case with the iphones etc
Griffiths.do they come with usb slots etc
i have stuff on external drives from a windows laptop, woud it be hard worki to
get this stuff on a mac.
one of the things is my itunes library which i've inported from cd in to itunes
via a windows 7 sony vaio, how would i get5 that in to itunes on a mac
thanks and sorry for being so thick
trace