Hi Adrian Adrian Orjales schrieb am 08.12.2018, 10:15 +0100: >I am spanish, so sorry for my bad english...😉 No need to apologize. A lot of us are non-native :).
>i am blind, and I have installed debian using the onboot install with speak >synthesis option. Doing that, when the installation success, i am not able >to use any screen reader on graphical interface, but Espeakup and brltty >are not affected by this. Espeakup/Speechd-up are using the Linux-internal ALSA sound system. The graphical interface uses the high-level Pulse sound system which exclusively locks the underlying ALSA device. So by default, you have sound either on the GUI or console. There are multiple ways around it. If you are using speech and braille, you might want to switch from Speakup to BRLTTY and configure it to also emit speech. Personally, I am quite happy with its speech screen reading capabilities. If you are using BRLTTY, you have two options: 1. You run pulse as root, described here: https://wiki.debian.org/accessibility#Run_Pulseaudio_as_root This means that both the GUI and BRLTTY can share the pulse sound server and hence both can emit sound. You need to configure BRLTTY to use this root pulse instance. 2. You disable pulse audio completely, which is easier but has its drawbacks and not all applications respect this. If you want to experiment with this option, have a look here: https://wiki.debian.org/accessibility#Disable_Pulseaudio Maybe other list members know another option that I am not aware of. Please let us know if you need more details. Cheers Sebastian
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