It either says link or you can have it change pitch. In fact they even have entire sound schemes you can use. Rather than pitch, how about different voices? Woman equals link and man equals regular with the higher pitch indicating bold or italic and so on and so forth, you can set all of those. I even use some stuff that let's me hear the progress bars with tones that incrament acording to the percentage done. Take care, Sina No trees were destroyed in sending this message; however, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced. -----Original Message----- From: speakup-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:speakup-bounces at braille.uwo.ca] On Behalf Of Janina Sajka Sent: Saturday, January 17, 2004 10:30 PM To: Glenn Ervin at Home; Speakup is a screen review system for Linux. Subject: Re: Restoring grub But how? If you let Windows' IE load a page and just listen to it being read, how do you know what part of the text you're hearing is a link, and what part is just the text of the page. What's the signal that says "I'm a hyperlink?" How does that work? Glenn Ervin at Home writes: > From: "Glenn Ervin at Home" <GlennErvin at cableone.net> > > I guess that with winblows, one could just listen to a page as it > opens, and if you hear the link that you want, you can press the > control key and you will either be on the link, or a line or two past > it. Ready to just press enter on the link. Glenn.