Many thanks to Samuel for its support.
Unfortunately I am not able to make any modification to the application.
Chatty Infty is developed by a Japanese non-profit organization "Infty
Project" which provides very good tools for visually impaired scientists
(Japanese / English).
I have adapted some i
D&J Renaldo, le Thu 27 Nov 2014 10:10:47 +0100, a écrit :
> I thought that BRLTTY was more or less working like a screen reader able to
> read text window in any application opened in W7 and to pass commands to
> this application.
Ah, no, it's only able to read console windows, nothing more. To re
Dear all,
The organization for which I work uses Zimbra for handling e-mails and
calendars. For mails it's okay because there is an IMAP interface, but
for calendars I feel quite stuck. Indeed the only interface I know about
t the moment is the Web interface and I really don't find it convenient.
Thanks to Samuel for his answer.
So, I have loaded NVDA and linked it to BRLTTY as defined in relevant
documentation.
Even if NVDA is working fine for the speech function and has well taken into
account BRLTTY connection, there is still no virtual Braille device screen.
Let me know if I need to ini
D&J Renaldo, le Thu 27 Nov 2014 15:35:23 +0100, a écrit :
> So, I have loaded NVDA and linked it to BRLTTY as defined in relevant
> documentation.
> Even if NVDA is working fine for the speech function and has well taken into
> account BRLTTY connection, there is still no virtual Braille device scr
> Did you start brltty before starting NVDA?
Yes
> It should already be showing the xw window.
No, as I said, BrlAPI shows nothing. It is running but looks idle.
> And once NVDA is started, the xw window should be showing NVDA's output
(provided that NVDA is configured to emit its output to BRLTTY