On 3/21/2018 11:30 AM, Alex ARNAUD wrote:
> Le 21/03/2018 à 15:27, Eric Johansson a écrit :
>> On 3/20/2018 5:35 AM, Alex ARNAUD wrote:
>>>
>>> What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a
>>> head-tracking software?
>> I'm frustrated by this kind of question because frequently
On 03/21/2018 10:30 AM, Alex ARNAUD wrote:
Le 21/03/2018 à 15:27, Eric Johansson a écrit :
On 3/20/2018 5:35 AM, Alex ARNAUD wrote:
What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a
head-tracking software?
[snip]
I can't use keyboards much because of a repetitive stress injur
Le 21/03/2018 à 15:27, Eric Johansson a écrit :
On 3/20/2018 5:35 AM, Alex ARNAUD wrote:
What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a
head-tracking software?
I'm frustrated by this kind of question because frequently, this is the
wrong question. you should be asking what is
On 3/20/2018 5:35 AM, Alex ARNAUD wrote:
>
> What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a
> head-tracking software?
I'm frustrated by this kind of question because frequently, this is the
wrong question. you should be asking what is the appropriate interface
to enable the person
Le 20/03/2018 à 18:31, Mats L a écrit :
Both Onboard and Caribou were intended as replacements of GOK, but are
not really.
GOK was an ambitious effort to provide tailorable access for individuals
with major motor difficulties, including need for single and double
switch input. But it was not a
Le 20/03/2018 à 17:33, Alex ARNAUD a écrit :
Hello Thibaut,
Le 20/03/2018 à 11:14, Thibaut Paumard a écrit :
Le 20/03/2018 à 10:35, Alex ARNAUD a écrit :
What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a
head-tracking software?
Dasher comes to mind:
I've tested it, looks goo
El 20/03/18 a las 10:35, Alex ARNAUD escribió:
Are you aware of differences between eviacam and GNOME mousetrap?
I didn't try recent versions, thus I cannot answer
What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a head-tracking
software?
As Thibaut suggested, I think th
Alex ARNAUD, on mar. 20 mars 2018 17:33:25 +0100, wrote:
> Is Dasher should be configured to replace the keyboard when I open a text
> edition field?
IIRC that has never been implemented. It would be a matter of making it
e.g. an ibus input method or such.
Samuel
Mats L, on mar. 20 mars 2018 16:22:25 +0100, wrote:
> Unfortunately the GNU/Linux environments are badly missing a full-featured
> tailorable on-screen keyboard alternative (including switch input etc.)
> following up on the [4]GOK project since it was discontinued.
Is onboard not the continuation
Hello Thibaut,
Le 20/03/2018 à 11:14, Thibaut Paumard a écrit :
Le 20/03/2018 à 10:35, Alex ARNAUD a écrit :
What is as you know the most efficient way to write text with a
head-tracking software?
Dear Alex,
Dasher comes to mind:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dasher_(software)
I've tested
Le 20/03/2018 à 10:35, Alex ARNAUD a écrit :
What is as you know the most
efficient way to write text with a head-tracking software?
Dear Alex,
Dasher comes to mind:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dasher_(software)
Kind regards, Thibaut.
Le 19/03/2018 à 20:46, Cesar Mauri a écrit :
* Does head-tracking is really efficient?
(Disclaimer: I'm the author of eViacam and EVA Facial Mouse)
Are you aware of differences between eviacam and GNOME mousetrap?
However, if you mean whether is there a FOSS head tracker solution
available
Le 19/03/2018 à 18:03, Gregg Vanderheiden GPII a écrit :
have you tried the Unified Listing? http://ul.gpii.net part of
http://GPII.net
I've discovered the Unified Listing with your message. It's really
interesting. Thanks for the tips.
Best regards,
Alex.
* Does head-tracking is really efficient?
(Disclaimer: I'm the author of eViacam and EVA Facial Mouse)
If by efficiency you mean achieving the same throughput than a regular mouse,
then the answer is no. I'm not aware about any head tracker solution able reach
the same low difficulty level (i
have you tried the Unified Listing? http://ul.gpii.net part of
http://GPII.net
use advanced search (or standard search) and type Linux in the search box.
I found 63 hardware and software accessibility products that cite LINUX in
their descriptions.
Don’t see any eye trackers listed
Hello all,
To help people with motor disability, I'm trying to search what software
and technologies exist on GNU/Linux.
Sorry for the cross-list post but I don't know where to ask for help.
I've already found the following software:
* dasher: for writing text
* eviacam: a head tracking softw
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