Thank you DJ, I got all 152kb of it.
Chime
Jude's links config file in zipped format has permission problems.
He gave me the file (or an old version) years ago, and I have it here:
http://qsl.net/n1ea/lynxcfg.zip
I just tested it and it will download.
Best wishes,
David
On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 9:03 PM D.J.J. Ring, Jr. wrote:
> Just
Sorry Jude, in the words of the 4Tops "Its the Same Old Song" Wonder if some
portion of the file name is capitalized, but you think it isn't? Best of luck
figuring this out, but yet I think 1 lister did grab it.
Chime
My mistake, my public_html directory wasn't world-readable. Anyone trying
to download lynxcfg.zip shouldn't get an error 404 now.
On Fri, 30 Jul 2021, Chime Hart wrote:
> Well, Jude, I still get a 404 error.
> Chime
>
>
Well, Jude, I still get a 404 error.
Chime
Please try a download, I think I may have fixed the file permissions.
Just unzip Jude's file and using root, copy /etc/lynx/lynx.cfg to
/etc/lynx/lynx.cfg.original
Then copy Judge's file to /etc/lynx.cfg start lynx and enjoy.
Thanks Jude.
David
On Fri, Jul 30, 2021 at 8:53 PM Jude DaShiell wrote:
> my lynx configuration file is at:
> https://www.panix.com/jdashi
my lynx configuration file is at:
https://www.panix.com/jdashiel/lynxcfg.zip
On Fri, 30 Jul 2021, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> I could put my configuration file on my web page.
>
>
> On Fri, 30 Jul 2021, Jeffery Mewtamer wrote:
>
> > I generally find text-mode web browsers annoying to impossible to wo
I could put my configuration file on my web page.
On Fri, 30 Jul 2021, Jeffery Mewtamer wrote:
> I generally find text-mode web browsers annoying to impossible to work
> with(The navigational hotkeys provided by Orca, NVDA, and JAWS are
> just too darn useful), but couldn't some of the configura
I generally find text-mode web browsers annoying to impossible to work
with(The navigational hotkeys provided by Orca, NVDA, and JAWS are
just too darn useful), but couldn't some of the configuration hassles
be alleviated by someone who has configured the browser to uplaod
their config file somewhe
I agree with Jude about lynx. However I'll add that I've tried to get the
developer of Lynx to make the lengthy configuration easier on those of us
who use screen readers, the configuration file is huge, and it can be made
to work very well, but the amount of time it takes to read the file in a
sc
It may be a combination of devices like what's in a proper testing lab.
On Fri, 30 Jul 2021, Ahmed Hassan wrote:
> Well, if we know what device the demonstration will be done on, I believe
> we will be able to make more reasonable adjustments
>
lynx configured properly makes web browsing from the terminal possible if
not necessarily easy. With cursor turned on so it shows and links and
form fields numbered and images identified by labels web pages halfway
compliant are navigable. Probably some other settings I forgot. The
links and eli
If you're planning to run Debian, then Orca would be your best option.
It's reliable for Web browsing, in my experience.
The other possibility that you might be able to run under Linux is
ChromeVox (the new version, not the now obsolete browser extension). The
new version requires you to build
Hi,
Orca on Nix or Windblows you can use NVDA or a demo of JAWS.
Good luck
On 31/07/2021 4:51 am, Aaron wrote:
I need to demonstrate the benefits of writing accessible html to my
development group, and I'm wondering if anyone can recommend a good
screen reader I can use. It doesn't have to be
Hi Aaron
There are also blind users of the Linux console. They most often use
links or
lynks and read the screen with espeakup, fenrir, speechd-up a hard
synthesizer
(with speakup) or a Braille display.
Cheers,
Didier
--
Didier Spaier
Slint maintainer
https://slint.fr
Le 30/07/2021 à 20:51,
And talking about terminal, espeakup and brltty are the most used and
updated I think. But from terminal, the web browsing is difficult to perform
El El vie, 30 jul 2021 a las 21:58, Jude DaShiell
escribió:
> VoiceOver can do things Jaws cannot. It's possible to interact with web
> elements us
Well, if we know what device the demonstration will be done on, I believe
we will be able to make more reasonable adjustments
VoiceOver can do things Jaws cannot. It's possible to interact with web
elements using VoiceOver and that's the only screen reader I ever used
that could do that. No Jaws is not perfect, that's why so many updates
and the same holds for narrator and nvda.
Both jaws and nvda need rather much exper
>
> >i have used linux with orca long times
> >orca is not perfect but are jaws or nvda perfect?
> >or windows narrator?
> >we should not talk about surfing the web with voiceover on osx
>
> Voiceover for macos is slowly becoming a joke. It's unfortunate really
>
i have used linux with orca long times
orca is not perfect but are jaws or nvda perfect?
or windows narrator?
we should not talk about surfing the web with voiceover on osx
Den 30 juli 2021 21:46:31 skrev Adrian Orjales :
The best that you can do is give a try to all of them. I am not apple
f
The best that you can do is give a try to all of them. I am not apple
fanboy, I prefer windows instead of mac os. Also I am sysadmin and I use
all the systems including android and Linux, and all systems have good and
bad things.
Give a try to all of them, and you will see
But in my opinion, NVDA
>
> >orca and talkback are stable.
>
Orca has significantly less people working on it than other screen readers.
Voiceover for ios can be considered as far more mature and refined than
talk back.
>
> >only apple fanboys says anything else
>
orca and talkback are stable.
only apple fanboys says anything else
Den 30 juli 2021 21:34:59 skrev Adri Orjales :
Hi Aron
I strongly recommend you to use NVDA.
Under my opinion, is the simplest and most stable screen reader.
Under Linux, there are not stable screen readers. Orca can be used
Hi Aron
I strongly recommend you to use NVDA.
Under my opinion, is the simplest and most stable screen reader.
Under Linux, there are not stable screen readers. Orca can be used if there's
no other option.
Back to windows, Jaws is good but has a high learning curve.
In terms of smartphones, vo
Android: TalkBack out-of-the-box, speel, and commentari user-installed
imports. Commentari from China and I don't mean Tiwan so you may want to
be careful of that one.
MS-dos provox user-installed needs supported hardware speech synthesizer.
On Fri, 30 Jul 2021, john doe wrote:
> On 7/30/2021 9
On 7/30/21 3:05 PM, Ahmed Hassan wrote:
> Well, a list of screen readers:
> Voiceover (apple operating systems: ios, macos ETC)
> Orca (linux screen reader)
> NVDA (windows screen reader: free)
> JAWS (windows screen reader: paid but has a free trial)
> Kind regards: Ahmed
Thanks Ahmed. Do you hav
On 7/30/2021 9:05 PM, Ahmed Hassan wrote:
Well, a list of screen readers:
Voiceover (apple operating systems: ios, macos ETC)
Orca (linux screen reader)
NVDA (windows screen reader: free)
NVDA is very good to create and interpret HTML pages.
--
John Doe
Well, a list of screen readers:
Voiceover (apple operating systems: ios, macos ETC)
Orca (linux screen reader)
NVDA (windows screen reader: free)
JAWS (windows screen reader: paid but has a free trial)
Kind regards: Ahmed
I need to demonstrate the benefits of writing accessible html to my
development group, and I'm wondering if anyone can recommend a good
screen reader I can use. It doesn't have to be open source, but I'd like
it to do a really good job of showing what is possible and how following
the WCAG standard
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