Regarding navigational hotkeys, to my knowledge, no major graphical browser has these built-in. However, they are a standard accessibility feature provided by graphical screen readers such as Orca under Windows and NVDA and JAWS under Windows. An understandable mistake, as a web browser being able to quickly jump between specific web elements would make sense, and I can only assume the feature is implemented by the screen reader instead of the browser because most sighted users would just use the mouse to accomplish what Orca/NVDA/JAWS users utilize navigation hotkeys for, and even keyboard-focused sighted users are content with being able to scroll the page via arrow keys and can skip over irrelevant parts of a page effortlessly thanks to vision's more random access nature compared to hearing's more sequential access nature. At the very least, I never even thought about the heading structure of pages I visited, where certain form elements are in relation to the content of a page, and was almost never bothered by large, dense blocks of links at the top or bottom of a page or long lists of links down the sides back when I had usable vision, and now its second nature for me to get a feel for a page's heading structure. And, I'll confess I make frequent use of crtl+F to find text on a web page in Firefox, but thanks to the navigational hotkeys provided by Orca, that's usually a last resort rather than my go to, and is usually a sign a web page is poorly designed if I have to use it for any reason aside from bookmarking my place in the middle of a long page. Anyways, as long as we have someone singing its praises, can someone direct me to a user's guide for w3m? I tried it out yeasterday, but couldn't figure out how to load even a known website. -- Sincerely, Jeffery Wright Bachelor of Computer Science President Emeritus, Nu Nu Chapter, Phi Theta Kappa. _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list