Reading on Mac OS.

By Khomus, 22 September, 2024

Forum
macOS and Mac Apps

Hi everybody.

What do we like for reading longer texts? Mostly books, but I'm trying to generalize a bit. On Windows I use QRead for most things, because I can have multiple files open, select and copy text if needed, and it generally saves my place in whatever's open. For Kindle I use Kindle, obviously, if it's web stuff I'll often just read it in Firefox.

If there's an odder format, e.g. .rtf, I just use whatever opens it. I don't know that there's something like QRead on Mac, so I'm not necessarily looking for that, although if there is, great. I generally have stuff in .epub, .pdf, probably some Word docs, .txt., maybe some .rtf.

I might be missing some format or other, but that should cover most of it. Bookmarking in whatever app or set of apps we've got would be nice, but I guess I could just leave whatever app(s) open and put the machine to sleep to keep my place. I have no idea what's out there for a pleasant read on the Mac, so I'd really appreciate learning about whatever everybody's using.

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Comments

By Maldalain on Sunday, September 22, 2024 - 12:35

Speech Central works great on the Mac, and Voice Dream Reader is compatible. I would go Speech Central. One more app that I do not recommend is Easy Reader.

By Khomus on Sunday, September 22, 2024 - 12:35

I'll check those out. But I'm also fine if there's say, a great app for dealing with Bookshare books,another for.pdf,another for .rtf,and so on.

I just mentioned QRead because it's what I'm using now, so if there's not a single app that handles most things, that's fine too.
I'm way more interested in bookmarking if possible, and I'd
actually prefer something that uses standard VO commands.

By amro on Sunday, September 22, 2024 - 12:35

For reading long texts on a Mac, Apple Books works well for ePub and PDFs, letting you bookmark and sync across devices. If you need something that handles more file types, Calibre is a good open-source option for ePub, PDF, and more.

Skim is a simple app for reading and annotating PDFs, while Microsoft Word or Pages can handle Word docs and .rtf files. The Kindle app is great if you have Kindle books, letting you read on any device

By TheBllindGuy07 on Sunday, September 22, 2024 - 12:35

Last time I tested this 3 months ago it is not accessible at all like its ios or windows counterpart. Basically you can read only the full 1 page without any formatting at a time and it just doesn't work for navigation. Unless things have changed since then? I would too recommend easy reader. Voicedream despite its latest dramma is still the only app to support acapela tts voices (and only on ios). If this is not a factor for you then by all mean just stick with speech central which you can get for free as a voiceover user. When I know I won't be reading cross platform then I can choose apple books, it works mostly fine with some minor bugs. Google play books is also an option although I don't know if you can even import your own files there? Probably yes. (Edit: yes you definitely can do that).
A question for applevis as well from me, since calibre is made with qt, how is its accessibility on the mac?
Hope this helps.

By Cankut DeÄŸerli on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

If you are Using Mac OS Sequoia, Preview and voiceover got mutch better handeling Pdf reading experienses. Voiceover recognise the text format and gives a smooth experiense.

By Khomus on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

I checked the Microsoft store and the app store, they're both paid, looks like ten bucks on the Mac App store.

Or does it detect Voiceover and offer a free download? I can't see how. But I am just looking at the app store on Windows right now.

By Chris on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

@Cankut DeÄŸerli How has Preview support improved in Sequoia? Is it now possible to properly navigate by links, headings, tables, etc in PDF documents? Has the latest version of Pages improved this as well? When I tried it in Ventura on my 2013 Air via OCLP, I could use the rotor to navigate, but it didn't always seem to show all elements, and standard commands like VO Command L for link, H for heading, etc didn't work.

By Cankut DeÄŸerli on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

For Preview, yes. You can use command+VO+H to go to headdings for example. I haven't checked it for Pages yet, so I can not say anything to that. But preview is very smooth now.

By PaulMartz on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

I'm about to rant about PDFs. Before I do, thanks for the reading app recommendations. I, too, would like to know how to get Speech Central for free. It sounds like a great tool.

Rant follows.

In the early days of hypertext markup, the server provided content and appearance was left to the web browser. That wasn’t good enough for corporate marketing departments, who wanted greater control over how content looked. Thus, PDF was born, and accessibility became its roadkill.

When I use VoiceOver to read PDFs in Preview, I frequently encounter text read out of order (such as the page header read last instead of first), or blocks of text that break along illogical boundaries (for example, a block of text containing a single letter, or a block of text that contains multiple paragraphs).

It’s unclear to me why apps capable of presenting a PDF page in a way that makes sense visually are utterly unable to share that text with VoiceOver in the same logical manner. Not just Preview, but any PDF software. And this is an issue that has remained unaddressed for over two decades.

By TheBllindGuy07 on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

Preview, and safari for that matter, has the biggest advantage of speed as adobe acrobat on windows is very slow in the first place and especially with screen readers whether you use nvda or jaws.
But yeah preview is generally good on mac.

By Sebby on Tuesday, September 24, 2024 - 12:35

Unless I'm doing something very wrong, I can't even get it to continuously scroll and be read with VO say all. It works fine—well, sort of, it sometimes misses lines in the text, but at least it scrolls—on iOS. But not macOS.

I'm not a big fan of any of the reader apps for the blind on macOS though I acknowledge that at least they work. The abstraction is powerful on iPhone because you can wear earbuds and control them that way, treating TTS as though audio. But on a Mac where you've got a full-fat keyboard, having the screen reader do the job it was designed for seems to me to be the correct way of going about things.

What do you think?