> On Mar 5, 2020, at 03:30, Samuel Thibault wrote:
>
> One thing I am missing in your description is: how is the system getting
> installed in your use case? Is it installed by the blind user himself,
> or by somebody else?
Ideally, the system hardware and software could be installed and config
On Thu, 2020-03-05 at 07:16 -0500, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> If dummy was used for monitor type, the screen reader could come up
> talking without any monitor attached. Many linux distros including
> debian can get a monitor turned on and off during operation and don't
> let a screen reader know now
If dummy was used for monitor type, the screen reader could come up
talking without any monitor attached. Many linux distros including
debian can get a monitor turned on and off during operation and don't
let a screen reader know now we have a working monitor and now we don't
have a working monito
Package: debian-installer
Version: 20190702+deb10u3
What I did:
Booting from a Debian 10 Install-CD in a virtual environment (IaaS). I
hope the package version above is correct.
The installer proceeds fine until network setup phase. The
auto-configuration via DHCP seems to be successful. Next,
Hello,
Rich Morin, le jeu. 05 mars 2020 02:53:30 -0600, a ecrit:
> I don't know all the ins and outs of preseeding, etc. So, I'll talk about
> use cases. I'm mostly looking for a way to make freshly installed systems
> (e.g., PC, RasPi) accessible in two situations:
One thing I am missing in
Thanks to everyone for considering these questions, offering suggestions, etc.
Here are some comments and clarifications.
I don't know all the ins and outs of preseeding, etc. So, I'll talk about use
cases. I'm mostly looking for a way to make freshly installed systems (e.g.,
PC, RasPi) acce
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