So, you are using thunderbird.
now that you're reading my mail. if you are on windows:
press control+shift+l
and it will let you to reply to the list, and you don't need to write
the to list manually.
if you are on linux, go to the message menu, then arrow down to
"reply to list"
then press enter and you can reply to list.
On 2/2/2014 9:49 PM, Chris Norman wrote:
That's great, thanks for the info, and in particular the reply to
list thing... I've never figured out how to do that other than
changing to to: field! :-)
Cheers,
On 02/02/2014 17:03, hadi remonion wrote:
Hello Chriss
To be honest, like you, i have been using debian on my headless
servers. i have 3 servers, and two of them are running debian.
I think debian 7.3 runs gnome 3.4.2 which is accessible out of the
box. it depends what you want to do with it daily. browsing,
reading mails, and listening to music? of course you can do it
easily with debian.
but it all depends on your usage.
p.s if you are using thunderbird, make sure you hit the "reply to
list" item, otherwise your mail goes directly to the person who's
replying you, instead of the mailinglist itself.
Cheers.
Hadi
On 2/2/2014 3:02 AM, Chris Norman wrote:
That's lovely, thank you. When Debian comes up, what is the
general state of accessibility? I mean, could a person comfortably
use it in every day situations?
Cheers,
On 01/02/2014 21:20, Hadi wrote:
Hi Chris
boot Debian OS, wait for the beep, then press S and enter. you'll
enter the Debian accessibility mode in which you can install
Debian and orca will be set for you for system start up.
for more tricks and tips and more accessibility options with java
and QT, visit Debian accessibility wiki at
https://wiki.debian.org/accessibility
which is neatly written
Cheers
Hadi
On 2/2/2014 12:02 AM, Chris Norman wrote:
Hi all,
I've been using Debian now for a while on a VPS, mainly as a
server, although I've been using things like NMap that I can
only do from Linux.
I have a few laptops lying around which I thought I might as
well do something with, so I'm wondering, is there a document
somewhere about Debian accessibility?
I hit google with the problem, and there were a few vague
mentions of a Debian accessibility movement, but no hard and
fast "Here's how you install without a screen", or docs on
getting orca working once you've installed etc.
Sorry if this has been asked before, but Google's just not
playing ball on this one!
Cheers guys, and I hope this email finds you all well.