Re: getting Orca back
Hi Glen, I have seen you for several years now struggling to get an OS up and running. Do you change operating system a lot and if so why? Have you considered using Vinux which is setup out of the box for you? Thanks Rob Whyte On 19/11/16 14:12, Glenn / Lenny wrote: > Hi All, > After the latest of my attempts I tried from here, I still have no > Orca, and sound tests yield nothing either. > I hear pops while Ubuntu is starting. > Anyone know how to get the audio back to defaults so I may get this > thing working again? > I'll have to type into a terminal without speech, hoping I get no typos. > Thanks for any assistance. > Glenn > > -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
getting Orca back
Hi All, After the latest of my attempts I tried from here, I still have no Orca, and sound tests yield nothing either. I hear pops while Ubuntu is starting. Anyone know how to get the audio back to defaults so I may get this thing working again? I'll have to type into a terminal without speech, hoping I get no typos. Thanks for any assistance. Glenn-- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
That may have to be run in user account, I just don't know what kind of control you'll have. If that produces identical results then pulseaudio demon has to be started and the process repeated. There may be a pulseaudio daemon service file somewhere which had best not be started until after you get stuff working since that could have really destructive accessibility results. On Fri, 18 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 13:37:00 From: Glenn / Lenny To: Jude DaShiell , ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work I ran pacmd as root and it came back with: home directory not accessible, permission denied no pulseaudio deamon running or not running a session deamon. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Jude DaShiell" To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 11:42 AM Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work My suggestion then would be to install pacmd and run that in a console once you learn how to use it and see if you can change to c2 using pacmd as root, then run alsactl store as root and see if that works. On Fri, 18 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 12:13:09 From: Glenn / Lenny To: Jude DaShiell , ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work Hi, For Juan, I did not have pacucontrol installed, so I installed it. It was easy enough to get around with Orca, but I could only read the name of the bluetooth speaker with the review controls, the actual cursor would never let me navigate to it to control it. Jude, I ran alsamixer, and it seemed unusable with Orca. When I do aplay -l I get a list, but bluetooth speaker on or off, there is no change, and it does not show up in the list. On another note, I did: speaker-test -c 2 and the bluetooth speaker did the speaker test, but not the wired speaker that Orca runs through. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Jude DaShiell" To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 9:44 AM Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker to set as the default. Next, study pactl (good luck figuring out their terminology) and learn how to use that if you have pulseaudio installed on your system. If not, you don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next study alsamixer and if you don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker with alsamixer and test with speakertest once adjusted with connected speakers attached and on. If the connected speakers are silent but your bluetooth speaker runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and if all works well, your problem is solved. On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 From: Glenn / Lenny To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work Hi, I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker pocket Bluetooth Speaker. I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in control center, I can test it fine. But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only comes through connected speaker. So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, but that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. Thanks for any assistance. Glenn -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: Ubuntu-accessibility Digest, Vol 129, Issue 7
Since the wired speakers did not work in the speaker test, but the bluetooth one did, I ran: alsactl store as suggested, but after rebooting, Orca sounded like another language and English mixed, like part of words were Swedish or something, so I went in and tweaked the Orca settings to American English and rebooted, but now, I have no speech at all, but I hear the speakers pop as usual on startup and a slight speaker hiss, but I just cannot get any audio from Orca. I don't know if it is running or not. I ran orca, and that did not help. I ran as root: espeak "hello" which usually works, but does not now. Speaker-test -c 2 does not do anything either. The bluetooth speaker acts like it is paired, as it beeps after powering up, indicating it paired. The speaker pops and hiss come from the wired speaker. Is there something I can do to get Orca talking again? Thanks. Glenn - Original Message - From: > Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 10:44:27 > From: Jude DaShiell > To: Glenn / Lenny , > ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com > Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work > > That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your > system. > So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to > adjust > output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will > tell > you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the > bluetooth > speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth > speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. > See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker > to > set as the default. Next, study pactl (good luck figuring out their > terminology) and learn how to use that if you have pulseaudio installed on > your system. If not, you don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next > study > alsamixer and if you don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker > with alsamixer and test with speakertest once adjusted with connected > speakers attached and on. If the connected speakers are silent but your > bluetooth speaker runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and > if > all works well, your problem is solved. > > On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: > >> Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 >> From: Glenn / Lenny >> To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com >> Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work >> >> Hi, >> I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. >> I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker >> pocket Bluetooth Speaker. >> I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in >> control center, I can test it fine. >> But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only >> comes through connected speaker. >> So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? >> As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, >> but >> that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. >> Thanks for any assistance. >> Glenn > > -- -- next part -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility -- next part -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility -- Message: 4 Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 11:13:09 -0600 From: "Glenn / Lenny" To: "Jude DaShiell" , Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work Message-ID: <9DF22249A7C54017A710350F8CB86F0F@LennyAcer5720> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1" Hi, For Juan, I did not have pacucontrol installed, so I installed it. It was easy enough to get around with Orca, but I could only read the name of the bluetooth speaker with the review controls, the actual cursor would never let me navigate to it to control it. Jude, I ran alsamixer, and it seemed unusable with Orca. When I do aplay -l I get a list, but bluetooth speaker on or off, there is no change, and it does not show up in the list. On another note, I did: speaker-test -c 2 and the bluetooth speaker did the speaker test, but not the wired speaker that Orca runs through. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Jude DaShiell" To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 9:44 AM Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker to set
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
I ran pacmd as root and it came back with: home directory not accessible, permission denied no pulseaudio deamon running or not running a session deamon. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Jude DaShiell" To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 11:42 AM Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work My suggestion then would be to install pacmd and run that in a console once you learn how to use it and see if you can change to c2 using pacmd as root, then run alsactl store as root and see if that works. On Fri, 18 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: > Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 12:13:09 > From: Glenn / Lenny > To: Jude DaShiell , > ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com > Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work > > Hi, > For Juan, I did not have pacucontrol installed, so I installed it. > It was easy enough to get around with Orca, but I could only read the name > of the bluetooth speaker with the review controls, the actual cursor would > never let me navigate to it to control it. > Jude, I ran alsamixer, and it seemed unusable with Orca. > When I do aplay -l > I get a list, but bluetooth speaker on or off, there is no change, and it > does not show up in the list. > > On another note, I did: > speaker-test -c 2 > and the bluetooth speaker did the speaker test, but not the wired speaker > that Orca runs through. > Glenn > - Original Message - > From: "Jude DaShiell" > To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; > > Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 9:44 AM > Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work > > > That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your > system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to > use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l > since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do > is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check > output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker > is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. > If so, you probably know which speaker to set as the default. Next, > study pactl (good luck figuring out their terminology) and learn how to > use that if you have pulseaudio installed on your system. If not, you > don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next study alsamixer and if you > don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker with alsamixer and > test with speakertest once adjusted with connected speakers attached and > on. If the connected speakers are silent but your bluetooth speaker > runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and if all works > well, your problem is solved. > > On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: > >> Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 >> From: Glenn / Lenny >> To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com >> Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work >> >> Hi, >> I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. >> I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker >> pocket Bluetooth Speaker. >> I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in >> control center, I can test it fine. >> But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only >> comes through connected speaker. >> So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? >> As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, >> but that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. >> Thanks for any assistance. >> Glenn > > -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
My suggestion then would be to install pacmd and run that in a console once you learn how to use it and see if you can change to c2 using pacmd as root, then run alsactl store as root and see if that works. On Fri, 18 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 12:13:09 From: Glenn / Lenny To: Jude DaShiell , ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work Hi, For Juan, I did not have pacucontrol installed, so I installed it. It was easy enough to get around with Orca, but I could only read the name of the bluetooth speaker with the review controls, the actual cursor would never let me navigate to it to control it. Jude, I ran alsamixer, and it seemed unusable with Orca. When I do aplay -l I get a list, but bluetooth speaker on or off, there is no change, and it does not show up in the list. On another note, I did: speaker-test -c 2 and the bluetooth speaker did the speaker test, but not the wired speaker that Orca runs through. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Jude DaShiell" To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 9:44 AM Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker to set as the default. Next, study pactl (good luck figuring out their terminology) and learn how to use that if you have pulseaudio installed on your system. If not, you don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next study alsamixer and if you don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker with alsamixer and test with speakertest once adjusted with connected speakers attached and on. If the connected speakers are silent but your bluetooth speaker runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and if all works well, your problem is solved. On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 From: Glenn / Lenny To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work Hi, I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker pocket Bluetooth Speaker. I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in control center, I can test it fine. But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only comes through connected speaker. So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, but that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. Thanks for any assistance. Glenn -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
Hi, For Juan, I did not have pacucontrol installed, so I installed it. It was easy enough to get around with Orca, but I could only read the name of the bluetooth speaker with the review controls, the actual cursor would never let me navigate to it to control it. Jude, I ran alsamixer, and it seemed unusable with Orca. When I do aplay -l I get a list, but bluetooth speaker on or off, there is no change, and it does not show up in the list. On another note, I did: speaker-test -c 2 and the bluetooth speaker did the speaker test, but not the wired speaker that Orca runs through. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Jude DaShiell" To: "Glenn / Lenny" ; Sent: Friday, November 18, 2016 9:44 AM Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker to set as the default. Next, study pactl (good luck figuring out their terminology) and learn how to use that if you have pulseaudio installed on your system. If not, you don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next study alsamixer and if you don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker with alsamixer and test with speakertest once adjusted with connected speakers attached and on. If the connected speakers are silent but your bluetooth speaker runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and if all works well, your problem is solved. On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: > Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 > From: Glenn / Lenny > To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com > Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work > > Hi, > I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. > I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker > pocket Bluetooth Speaker. > I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in > control center, I can test it fine. > But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only > comes through connected speaker. > So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? > As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, > but that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. > Thanks for any assistance. > Glenn -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker to set as the default. Next, study pactl (good luck figuring out their terminology) and learn how to use that if you have pulseaudio installed on your system. If not, you don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next study alsamixer and if you don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker with alsamixer and test with speakertest once adjusted with connected speakers attached and on. If the connected speakers are silent but your bluetooth speaker runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and if all works well, your problem is solved. On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 From: Glenn / Lenny To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work Hi, I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker pocket Bluetooth Speaker. I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in control center, I can test it fine. But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only comes through connected speaker. So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, but that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. Thanks for any assistance. Glenn -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
Sometimes a bluetooth dongle is needed and sometimes not if one of those is part of your hardware. Whichever the case may be, see if you can get the version of the bluetooth card and if that version is less than 3.0 that could be some or all of your problem. On Fri, 18 Nov 2016, Jude DaShiell wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 10:44:27 From: Jude DaShiell To: Glenn / Lenny , ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: Re: making a bluetooth speaker work That's a pulseaudio/alsa problem depending on what you have on your system. So pactl or alsamixer will be an intermediate tool for you to use to adjust output. A primary command to run for output is aplay -l since that will tell you about all available devices. What I would do is first shut the bluetooth speaker off and run aplay -l and check output. Then turn on bluetooth speaker and make sure bluetooth speaker is paired and run aplay -l again. See if the output is any different. If so, you probably know which speaker to set as the default. Next, study pactl (good luck figuring out their terminology) and learn how to use that if you have pulseaudio installed on your system. If not, you don't have to deal with pactl or pacmd. Next study alsamixer and if you don't have pulseaudio installed, adjust your speaker with alsamixer and test with speakertest once adjusted with connected speakers attached and on. If the connected speakers are silent but your bluetooth speaker runs then run alsactl store as root and then reboot and if all works well, your problem is solved. On Thu, 17 Nov 2016, Glenn / Lenny wrote: Date: Fri, 18 Nov 2016 00:42:12 From: Glenn / Lenny To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com Subject: making a bluetooth speaker work Hi, I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker pocket Bluetooth Speaker. I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in control center, I can test it fine. But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only comes through connected speaker. So how does one get it to default to the bluetooth speaker? As mentioned, it works, as the left and right test sounds come from it, but that is the only thing I can get it to do so far. Thanks for any assistance. Glenn -- -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Re: making a bluetooth speaker work
Hi Luke and All, I could not find any audio settings that would allow me to change this. Could it also be that it has to do with the fact that it's Bluetooth 3.0? Also, I looked on the applications tab of the sound in hardware, and there is a bunch of speech dispatchers, and they all are not muted and have a valid number for the volume gain. Thanks for any more ideas. Glenn It may be that the device does not support sample rates below 44100. Luke Message-ID: <20161118061900.wlplfnts6pzbpeib@buffalo> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii On Fri, Nov 18, 2016 at 04:42:12PM AEDT, Glenn / Lenny wrote: > Hi, > I am running Ubuntu 16.04 on an Intel NUC PPYH. > I have been using a regular speaker on it, but I want to use an Anker pocket > Bluetooth Speaker. > I got it found and configured from the Bluetooth manager, and in sound in > control center, I can test it fine. > But I cannot get system sounds or Orca to speak from it, the audio only comes > through connected speaker. -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility