Le 27/11/2016 à 03:06, Samuel Thibault a écrit :
> Hello,
>
> MENGUAL Jean-Philippe, on Sat 26 Nov 2016 05:29:39 +0100, wrote:
>> Has someone tried Chromium on Debian? Here, Orca cannot speak inside. I
>> hoped to have chromevox from anyway, but no. Do you know how we could
>> implement this in
Hello,
MENGUAL Jean-Philippe, on Sat 26 Nov 2016 05:29:39 +0100, wrote:
> Has someone tried Chromium on Debian? Here, Orca cannot speak inside. I
> hoped to have chromevox from anyway, but no. Do you know how we could
> implement this in Debian? I don't know if it's interct^jng, but I guess
> it m
Hello,
Odd Martin Baanrud, on Sun 27 Nov 2016 00:20:43 +0100, wrote:
> I know this is off-topic for this list, but I also know that people here
> has used/are using qemu in an accessible way.
> For me, building/using a VM looks like a huge mess.
> If someone would like to share some tips, please r
dhof...@att.net, on Sat 26 Nov 2016 15:03:11 -0800, wrote:
> When you say the next release, do you mean official release or the
> current build?
The current stretch build already has the support for it.
Samuel
Hello,
I know this is off-topic for this list, but I also know that people here
has used/are using qemu in an accessible way.
For me, building/using a VM looks like a huge mess.
If someone would like to share some tips, please reply off-list.
Regards, Martin
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Description: OpenPGP
On 11/27/2016 12:01 AM, dhof...@att.net wrote:
> Yes it is part of the main board. The USB Soundcard is recognized by
> Vinux booted from a USB flash drive.
That doesn't help much if it's not by the Debian Installer.
However, it seems like this problem can be solved in Stretch, according
to what
When you say the next release, do you mean official release or the
current build?
--
Yes it is part of the main board. The USB Soundcard is recognized by
Vinux booted from a USB flash drive.
--
Hello,
dhof...@att.net, on Sat 26 Nov 2016 09:58:40 -0800, wrote:
> I have a 64 bit Dell PC with a sound card that is not working, so I am using
> a USB sound card instead. I want to install Debian using the accessible text
> installation process, but the net install ISO evidently is trying to
Hello,
On 11/26/2016 06:58 PM, dhof...@att.net wrote:
> I have a 64 bit Dell PC with a sound card that is not working, so I am using
> a USB sound card instead. I want to install Debian using the accessible text
> installation process, but the net install ISO evidently is trying to use the
>
I have a 64 bit Dell PC with a sound card that is not working, so I am using a
USB sound card instead. I want to install Debian using the accessible text
installation process, but the net install ISO evidently is trying to use the
bad sound card. Is there a way to change to the USB sound card
Package: espeak-ng
Version: 1.49.0+dfsg-2
Severity: wishlist
Dear Maintainer,
while I'm excited to see an active fork of espeak, I felt let down by
the debian packaging: I'd like to switch from using espeak to espeak-ng,
but I'll have to edit my scripts to append the -ng suffix everywhere. Or
ind
Accepted:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
Format: 1.8
Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2016 08:39:27 +0100
Source: emacspeak
Binary: emacspeak emacspeak-espeak-server
Architecture: source
Version: 45.0+dfsg-1
Distribution: unstable
Urgency: medium
Maintainer: Debian Accessibility Team
Changed
emacspeak_45.0+dfsg-1_source.changes uploaded successfully to localhost
along with the files:
emacspeak_45.0+dfsg-1.dsc
emacspeak_45.0+dfsg.orig.tar.bz2
emacspeak_45.0+dfsg-1.debian.tar.xz
Greetings,
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