Under most circumstances, alt+control+d should hide all windows and
focus the desktop.
I believe it used to be defined as "Show the desktop" in the system's
keyboard shortcuts, but it works here even though I no longer see the
shortcut definition.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibili
are available. Hope it helps.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Interesting. I haven't noticed any crashing within the past month. I
only notice the issue I reported, which has been pretty much the same
for more than 10 years actually. It definitely did crash some time back,
but that seems to have been fixed recently.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility
iframes. See
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/evolution/-/issues/908
for my bug report and explanations of what is happening.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
your best option, as it allows you to choose
exactly the file and device you want.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
You should have access to Clonezilla. I believe that will do what you need,
though I have little experience with it. I believe it runs from a terminal.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
I can't be sure that it has Orca on the image by default, but I know that it can
be installed, and that it will in fact work. You may need to get ssh working,
but if it works out of the box, you can prepare your board for speech from the
shell using aptitude as usual. Please do let me know if
I've heard of it. In fact, it's been mentioned fairly recently on a
couple of other lists. I can't remember if it's based on Debian or an
Ubuntu LTS. If memory serves and the search results I'm seeing are
correct, I believe a company called Cocofrix develops it. I found them
at cocofrix.com.
You may need the brasero application. I think that may give you the
option you need in the file manager. If not, you should have no trouble
opening Brasero and writing from the iso directly to your DVD, which
would be listed as a blank disk.
Imetumwa kutoka simu yangu
--
Isn't handbrake accessible? Arista Transcoder may also work. I believe
both use gtk, and I did make them both work at one time, though I
usually just use ffmpeg now.
Imetumwa kutoka samaki yangu
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
It doesn't sound like your problem is with Thunderbird. I think Gmail is
the culprit here. It's possible it doesn't fully recognize you and
thinks you're trying to login from an unknown device. You will need to
verify that you are you by other means before Google will unblock your
access to
Yes. Vinux will have one more release based on Ubuntu 16.04.
Sent from the bridge
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
Kodi doesn't work with any OS screen reader. You need the kodi screen
reader addon, which you will be able to unzip inside Kodi's addons
directory before you start it for the first time. Open up a terminal and
execute the following commands before you start Kodi, being sure that
you are
I'm not sure how that works, although Ubuntu probably packages more
kernels from supported devices, so that may make the difference. Ubuntu
packages different kernel packages from Debian and also patches its own
software as well, so it's not surprising that they are able to support
more
The main problem with Thunderbird is that it seems to freeze when your
~/.thunderbird directory gets too large. The best way to resolve this
issue is to uncheck "store messages on this computer" from your account
settings for each account. Hope this helps.
Sent from my ordinary world
--
One thing you may possibly need to do once you uncomment that line is
to run
sudo grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
If this still produces no beep, then it's likely that your device is
incapable of beeping before the kernel's sound driver is loaded, in
which case, you will hear nothing from
multiple
competitors to step up and offer something good based on the Ubuntu One
code.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https
could tell you nothing about the
state of proprietary operating systems and screen readers today, and
don't want to have to learn/relearn such crap.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
--
Ubuntu-accessibility
of a degree or
certificate program at a university.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu
, but I'm not sure how it's
modified. Both Evince and Firefox are jumbling it a bit, as are
pdftotext and pdftohtml. I really do like the concept though, and hope
either their text or our reading tools will improve soon.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World
be to keep trying and trying to make Voxin or any other packaged version
of this speech synthesizer run just a little longer.
~Kyle
http:/kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility
-dispatcher will support it.
The only other option for many different languages is eSpeak, but many
of its languages need native speakers to fix them up so they sound better.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
a
productivity standpoint. I believe this is an opinion based on personal
preference, but I seem to be able to navigate faster and do more in less
time with gnome-shell than I could with Unity, and 3.8 has made a major
improvement in that regard.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake
I'm just a little concerned that the GNOME edition is still running
GNOME 3.6 + Orca 3.8, whereas Ubuntu 13.04 should be running GNOME 3.8
in its entirety. But maybe they will upgrade the GNOME edition to 3.8
after the Ubuntu release is finalized.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her
of things, so that you can file more informed bug reports based
on the newest, dare I say shiniest, technology.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility
, because we will be recognizing the fact that developers
are in fact human beings, and developers and the companies who employ
them will recognize that we are also human beings.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk/
--
Kyle? ... She calls her cake, Kyle?
Out of This World, season 2 episode 21 - The Amazing Evie
. You could also try one of the Sonar images at
http://sonar-project.org/
which is based on Ubuntu 12.04 and then update it to run GNOME 3.6. Hope
this helps.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo
Sonar is based on Ubuntu 12.04, so the update manager should get you the
latest packages, while still allowing you to keep Sonar's modifications,
and therefore should update to GNOME 3.6.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https
with or without gnome-shell, depending on the image you
download, and configure it to run by default. I'm not 100% sure that
Orca speaks the login screen on Sonar, but it should as far as I know.
~Kyle
http://kyle.tk
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https
Yes, the off-list message was a mistake. I should have looked back at
the To: box to be sure it was going to the list, as some lists don't
seem to handle replies correctly. Thanks for pointing this out.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https
everywhere, and keep up the great work toward making it
work on Ubuntu and other Linux distributions.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
, that in GNOME3, I seem to have to kill Python the
first time I open or save a file using the Metacity file chooser in
order to get Orca talking again, which does seem to be a new problem.
Nautilus also hangs on my home directory, but usually for only about 5
seconds.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu
personal recommendation is to use speech-dispatcher, since
it provides an abstraction layer for a number of free and proprietary
speech synthesizers.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
option for
low-memory systems, but the speech-dispatcher module for it only works
with the worst sounding voice. There are 3 or 4 other better voices that
can be selected from the command line, but they don't work with
speech-dispatcher's flite module for some reason.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu
on the problem if you can find an error message or something
else I may have overlooked.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
to it over bluetooth on Ubuntu all the time, so it should work for Talks
on your N82 as well.
~Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
If you are using Thunderbird 3.0 and open a message, you can press
control-W to get back to the list. Each message opens in its own tab,
and control-W closes the tab.
~Kyle
--
Jesus you're my life.
I live only to serve You
Each and every day.
--Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
start the VM, you should be able to enter the key sequence and
everything should work as advertised.
Kyle
--
Jesus you're my life.
I live only to serve You
Each and every day.
--Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman
pulseaudio, even though I really
don't need it because I have a SoundBlaster Live which does hardware mixing.
Good luck,
Kyle
--
Jesus you're my life.
I live only to serve You
Each and every day.
--Kyle
--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
Ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
https
40 matches
Mail list logo