I think it is perfectly reasonable to talk about Hypra, as they support
Debian with testing, with code, and with feedback. Even more so, their
contributions also benefit other distros, just like work done in other
groups benefit Debian.
it is a little less obvious that we should allow talking
Well, that makes sense. We just haven’t had the time to spread the word. Time
for official launch is September.
Fernando
(Written with dictation software)
> On Jul 10, 2019, at 1:08 PM, Shérab wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Fernando Botelho (2019/07/10 10:19 -0300):
>> Yes, as
software)
> On Jul 10, 2019, at 10:07 AM, Samuel Thibault wrote:
>
> Fernando Botelho, le mer. 10 juil. 2019 10:05:44 -0300, a ecrit:
>> We have not yet launched officially, so I doubt that the Portuguese version
>> is. But RHVoice might be. It is already use for Russia
gt; Hello,
>
> Fernando Botelho, le mer. 10 juil. 2019 09:44:22 -0300, a ecrit:
>> but you could mention the first good quality speech synthesizer to become
>> available for Linux in Brazilian Portuguese, done by a small little firm in
>> Curitiba, Brazil, in cooperation with RHVoi
Hi Cindy-Sue,
My proposal to present the world’s most affordable talking computer for the
blind got rejected, probably because we are using Arch Linux; but you could
mention the first good quality speech synthesizer to become available for Linux
in Brazilian Portuguese, done by a small little f
F123Light does something similar to what you are describing, but we do
it using Arch Linux and specifically for the Raspberry Pi.
I will update our documentation and share a page url under this email
thread in case anybody is interested.
We also have a bash script called configure-wifi whic
It would be more useful if you both gave a list of specific things in
Orca, which you would like improved. Nobody responds to generic
complaints, since those of us in Linux are using Orca and other screen
readers because we like them mostly as they are.
Fernando
On 04/14/2018 02:37 PM, Chi
7 matches
Mail list logo