Now Paperback can use sounds to indicate the presence of bookmarks and notes. But this is inaccurate in some ways. First, Paperback plays the associated sound at the beginning of a paragraph which contains a bookmark or note, not when that word, or the first word of the note or bookmark, is reached. This happens even with large paragraphs, and we get one sound alert upon reaching the first word of that paragraph. Second, if a paragraph contains several notes and bookmarks, we get just one single sound alert, again upon reaching that paragraph.
This is different from what JAWS does for bookmarks/ notes in MS Word, or what the Kurzweil 1000 did for bookmarks and notes. The sound alerts should be played exactly when we reach them, even in continuous reading via Up/ Down, and when we reach them via, say, Control+Left and Right.
Now Paperback can use sounds to indicate the presence of bookmarks and notes. But this is inaccurate in some ways. First, Paperback plays the associated sound at the beginning of a paragraph which contains a bookmark or note, not when that word, or the first word of the note or bookmark, is reached. This happens even with large paragraphs, and we get one sound alert upon reaching the first word of that paragraph. Second, if a paragraph contains several notes and bookmarks, we get just one single sound alert, again upon reaching that paragraph.
This is different from what JAWS does for bookmarks/ notes in MS Word, or what the Kurzweil 1000 did for bookmarks and notes. The sound alerts should be played exactly when we reach them, even in continuous reading via Up/ Down, and when we reach them via, say, Control+Left and Right.