Hello,
In addition to what was said:
- grub is in C, so no need for learning assembly to contribute sound
drivers to it :)
- the plan was to add sound support to grub, and pre-synthesize boot
entry texts for grub to play. This plan is still only in todo lists,
though.
- petitboot is an in
Where's the morse code training software for Linux that runs on the
command line? Everything I've been able to find has eye candy interfaces.
--
I forgot one thing, but this shouldn't impact it if your essid name
showed up. If you're in America wi-fi needs to be running on 5.0 band
and not 2.4 band now. That was an F.C.C. ruling.
On Tue, 23 Jul 2019, dhof...@att.net wrote:
> Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2019 16:03:18
> From: dhof...@att.net
> To:
Before doing anything else, please unplug your router from the power for
30 seconds. Then plug it back in and leave it plugged in for about 30
minutes and then try going into nmtui again and go into edit a
connection and edit wired connection and tab to delete and hit enter
then tab again to ok an
Wow! Thanks. As I said in an earlier message, I dodged the
bullet this time in that I should be able to protect the old
development system with a chroot jail. The assembler and
debugger/emulator that won't make in newer versions of debian should
still work and, assuming I can get a serial port t
Thanks very much. I suspected that but it looks like I don't
have to make a duel-boot system afterall. Someone on the debian
list suggested I use a chroot jail to encapsulate the old
distribution which, in this case, should solve the problem I was
trying to solve in the first place.
If i
From within the Mate terminal I entered:
nmtui
which opened a window which gave me 4 options, the second one to
activate a connection which I pressed.
This opened a window which said
Wired connection 1
and below that was the name of my ESSID name
I chose my ESSID
and it said connecting
a few
To make this talking GRUB to work, there would had to exist Assembly
language group of specialists who would have a good will to develop 6
KH/Z 8 BIts mono simple monotone speech engine for Grub.
I do not know, how many active developers work on Grub. Many boot
managers are using Assembler, mach
Hello Martin,
I absolutely hate what I call "press and pray" in which
the silent world prevails and you count button presses in the
silence and hope and pray that nothing weird happens.
GRUB can't be made to talk, but it can play songs using its
play command. So you can have it play a different
Please try running nmtui in a mate-terminal session and check out what
you find.
On Tue, 23 Jul 2019, dhof...@att.net wrote:
> Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2019 14:28:46
> From: dhof...@att.net
> To: Debian Accessibility
> Subject: Debian Buster and wifi
> Resent-Date: Tue, 23 Jul 2019 18:29:04 + (UTC)
I installed Debian `10 Buster 32 bit to an older desktop which has no
wifi card so I use a USB wifi adapter from ThinkPenguin.com. The
specifications state it is compatible with Debian 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 and
many other distros. It installed flawlessly using the netinstall iso
and that USB wifi adap
On 7/23/2019 6:59 PM, Martin McCormick wrote:
> I confess that I am on the low end of the grub learning
> curve but I need to make one debian system duel-boot with a
> different debian version. One version is debian wheezy which I
> want to keep because there are some PIC microcontroller
> d
I confess that I am on the low end of the grub learning
curve but I need to make one debian system duel-boot with a
different debian version. One version is debian wheezy which I
want to keep because there are some PIC microcontroller
development tools that make just fine in wheezy but the
could it be sysctl enable espeak and sysctl start espeak commands are no
longer run when that s key gets hit at the boot: prompt?
On Mon, 22 Jul 2019, Aaron wrote:
> Date: Mon, 22 Jul 2019 14:36:03
> From: Aaron
> To: debian-accessibility@lists.debian.org
> Cc: mhussainco...@gmail.com
> Subject:
Hi Aaron,
Aaron schrieb am 22.07.2019, 14:36 -0400:
>Thanks for the suggestions. I tried installing Orca on a Raspberry Pi
>the other day, but it seemed to have trouble with the Pixel desktop. I
>was a little concerned after reading that Orca is tightly integrated
>with the Gnome desktop, but more
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