Re: [orca-list] Confidential diary/journaling with Orca and Ubuntu 18.04



Mono works correctly on windows when all mono dependencies get
installed.  I think it was a qt library that needed installing with mono
on windows to get it working.  I did that a long time ago and didn't
keep my notes.  Also, sometimes jaws accessibility issues disappear with
jaws shut off and nvda running.

On Sat, 7 Jul 2018, Christopher Chaltain via orca-list wrote:

Date: Sat, 7 Jul 2018 23:37:26
From: Christopher Chaltain via orca-list <orca-list gnome org>
Reply-To: Christopher Chaltain <chaltain gmail com>
To: Christopher Gilland <clgilland07 gmail com>, orca-list gnome org
Subject: Re: [orca-list] Confidential diary/journaling with Orca and Ubuntu
    18.04

Yes, there definitely was a Windows version. It used the Mono framework, and
I'm thinking there were some accessibility issues with Mono and Windows.
https://lifehacker.com/5839633/tomboy-is-a-free-lightweight-note-taking-app-for-all-platforms


On 07/07/2018 10:31 PM, Christopher Gilland via orca-list wrote:
Aa, is there a Windows version? I was told there wasn't, but I'll look to
see for sure.


Wonder if they have a Mac client. Now, you got me curious!


Chris.



On 07/07/2018 11:29 PM, Christopher Chaltain wrote:
It's been a while, but I've used Tomboy Notes in the past. I remember
liking it a lot, and I think it was even a bit cross platform, although I
think some of the platforms, like Windows, had some issues with
accessibility.


On 07/07/2018 09:24 PM, Christopher Gilland via orca-list wrote:
By the way, someone on the list recommended a package to me privately, and
aside the fact of it not password protecting, it's exactly! down to the
core what I was looking for.


It's called Tomboy Notes.


sudo apt-get install tomboy


Chris.



On 07/07/2018 08:53 PM, Jude DaShiell wrote:
First think of a matrix.? Let's say it has three rows and three columns
for this example.? It actually has 4 columns since the 4th is what's
described as the sticky bit and the sticky bit when employed is the first
of what will be four digits if digits are used.? The second digit is the
user digit and it points at your own user account.? The third digit is
the
group digit and it points at anyone in your group.? The fourth digit is
the world digit and points at the rest of the world whenever they have or
don't have access to your equipment and files.? Now let's talk about
matrix rows.? Three rows exist.? The first row is read.? The second row
is
write.? The third row is execute.? The execute row is what's used to make
a shell script executable so it can run on a machine assuming all other
elements in it are correct.
If you want to put something in the read row in terms of numbers you have
a choice of 0 or 4.? To put something in the write row you have a choice
of 0 or 2.? To put something in the execute row you have a choice of 0 or
1.? So, to generate a numerical value for any file or directory
permission
you total the columns and remember to multiply the first column by 1,000
if using 4 digits or 100 if not using the sticky bit column The fourth
column isn't multiplied but the third column is multiplied by 10.? Those
numbers when totaled give you a file permissions number or directory
permissions number and you adjust those using chmod. Usually chmod number
file/directory gets the job done.? When permissions get adjusted on a
particular directory they apply to that directory's contents and
subdirectories under it if I'm not completely mistaken.? The next utility
to know about is chown which changes ownership of files and directories
on
a system.? Usual format for that is chown name
directory(or)directory/filename(or)directory/filename(s) use wildcards
where applicable for the last case.


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_______________________________________________
orca-list mailing list
orca-list gnome org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list
Orca wiki: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Orca
Orca documentation: https://help.gnome.org/users/orca/stable/
GNOME Universal Access guide:
https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/a11y.html
Log bugs and feature requests at http://bugzilla.gnome.org



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