I have heard that Oralux has no more licenses for the IBM voice, so if that
is true, then Oralux probably does not want to put a lot of resources into
maintaining it.
I prefer it to the more human sounding voices.
I sure wish Freedom Scientific would create Jaws For Linux (JFL), because
they see
Yes, and it fell on Deaf ears.
- Original Message -
From: "Chime Hart"
To: "K0LNY ??"
Cc: "Paul Gevers" ; "Andrew M.A. Cater"
;
Sent: Saturday, February 8, 2025 11:56 AM
Subject: Re: Voxin IBM
Well, Glen, I only know of Gilles involved with Oralux. As far as your great
idea of JFL,
Well, Glen, I only know of Gilles involved with Oralux. As far as your great
idea of JFL, are you going to write-and-suggest that? After all, they had
JAWS4DOS. Maybe 3 times I asked NVDA about a Linux version, considering its
Python? They said no.
Chime
Well, I also wrote Oralux some time ago, while I don't remember my inquiree, I
am waiting for him to fix how dates are processed useing Allison. They make it
a challenge examining an index of mail in Alpine.
Chime
Hi Andrew,
[My last reply in this off-topic drift].
On 08-02-2025 17:05, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
Because I'd expect the Release Team, early in Trixie time, to specify
that it's very unlikely to be supported in Forky and to be dropped
altogether in Duke at the latest.
Let's not make this a se
On Sat, Feb 08, 2025 at 04:27:44PM +0100, Paul Gevers wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
>
> On 08-02-2025 14:29, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > Intel/AMD 32 bit libraries will still
> > be available and work for you to run legacy software but it will be a
> > partial release and likely completely gone after Trixi
Hi Andrew,
On 08-02-2025 14:29, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
Intel/AMD 32 bit libraries will still
be available and work for you to run legacy software but it will be a
partial release and likely completely gone after Trixie in five years.
Why do you think it will be completely after trixie? With
Well, thank you Jeremy-and-Samuel. Looks as if I accidently nuked Samuel's
original reply. Meanwhile last evening after alot of searching I found an url
of experimental, which I put in a separate file in /etc/apt/sources.list.d. Was
finally able to upgrade ORCA. And certainly April 15 is quite a
On Sat, Feb 8, 2025 at 5:14 AM Samuel Thibault wrote:
> The new format is not line-per-line but paragraph-per-paragraph. You
> can copy/paste the paragraph for your "testing" source, and replace
> "testing" with "experimental".
You can add experimental to the same line as testing in the new
forma
On Sat, Feb 8, 2025 at 9:06 AM Samuel Thibault wrote:
> 48.0 will most probably happen before april 15.
Thanks. That sounds good.
Jeremy Bícha
Jeremy Bícha, le sam. 08 févr. 2025 08:47:09 -0500, a ecrit:
> On Sat, Feb 8, 2025 at 5:14 AM Samuel Thibault wrote:
> > The new format is not line-per-line but paragraph-per-paragraph. You
> > can copy/paste the paragraph for your "testing" source, and replace
> > "testing" with "experimental".
>
On Fri, Feb 07, 2025 at 04:50:49PM -0600, K0LNY ?? wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
> Yes, thanks, I did also write to Oralux, but haven't heard back yet.
> Sad about no more 32 bit Debian after the next release.
There will be 32 bit libraries available in the next release, just not
an installer. Kernel builds
On Fri, Feb 7, 2025 at 9:19 PM D.J.J. Ring, Jr. wrote:
> Do I understand this correctly, there is no menu in "Papers", you no longer
> have an infobar which wasn't default but required an opt-in selection but
> "Papers" features something called a "toast" which is a visual message that
> is rea
Chime Hart, le ven. 07 févr. 2025 18:38:59 -0800, a ecrit:
> Hi All: I was able to find the binary from experimental, but struggling
> through those installation instructions, involving "meson _build"
There is no need to build the package. Just add the experimental source
and install from it as yo
14 matches
Mail list logo