On Fri, Nov 23, 2012 at 06:28:14AM +0100, Bohdan R. Rau wrote:
> W dniu 2012-11-23 04:47, Daniel Dalton napisał(a):
>
> >How did you configure this?
> >I uncommented the start line from /etc/init/pulseaudio.conf
>
> It's not enough.
Thanks. I'll give this a go.
Cheers,
Dan
--
Ubuntu-accessib
W dniu 2012-11-23 04:47, Daniel Dalton napisał(a):
How did you configure this?
I uncommented the start line from /etc/init/pulseaudio.conf
It's not enough.
1) in file /etc/pulse/system.pa locate line:
load-module module-native-protocol-unix
and change it to:
load-module module-native-protocol
On Thu, Nov 22, 2012 at 08:08:51AM +0100, Bohdan R. Rau wrote:
> W dniu 2012-11-21 14:36, José Vilmar Estácio de Souza napisał(a):
>
> >The problem is that you can not use speakup and the gui environment
> >using the same login.
>
> I solved this problem running pulseaudio in system mode with no
On Thu, Nov 22, 2012 at 04:19:39PM -0200, José Vilmar Estácio de Souza wrote:
> Hi Daniel.
> If you installed ubuntu using orca, unity 2d is configured by default.
Hi José,
Yep, that must be it since it is what I did.
> In the login screen you can change to unity or to gnome-shell, but
> you ne
Hi Daniel.
If you installed ubuntu using orca, unity 2d is configured by default.
In the login screen you can change to unity or to gnome-shell, but you
need to install gnome-shell.
On 11/21/2012 09:21 PM, Daniel Dalton wrote:
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 11:36:43AM -0200, José Vilmar Estácio de
W dniu 2012-11-21 14:36, José Vilmar Estácio de Souza napisał(a):
The problem is that you can not use speakup and the gui environment
using the same login.
I solved this problem running pulseaudio in system mode with no
authorization. As I'm not regular orca/speakup user I can't say
everythi
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 11:36:43AM -0200, José Vilmar Estácio de Souza wrote:
> Hi Daniel,
Hi José,
> What version of ubuntu are you running?
12.10
> Are you running unity 2d or unity 3d?
Not sure, is there a method to check?
I just installed straight from the livecd as of last night, so what
On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 09:02:34AM -0600, Christopher Chaltain wrote:
> To get a list of all of the applications installed on a system using
> Unity 2D on a Ubuntu 12.04 system, tap the Super key to bring up the
> dash. Now arrow down and over and press the enter key on the
> applications button. N
To get a list of all of the applications installed on a system using
Unity 2D on a Ubuntu 12.04 system, tap the Super key to bring up the
dash. Now arrow down and over and press the enter key on the
applications button. Now down arrow and press the enter key on the
installed node in the tree and th
Hi Daniel,
I'll try to answer some questions, but first I've some questions.
What version of ubuntu are you running?
Are you running unity 2d or unity 3d?
See my answers below your questions.
1. How do I see the list of all my applications? I press the windows key
and then attempt to arrow a
Hi,
I'm currently a vision impaired user of debian, but I'm trying out
ubuntu and potentially looking to make a switch.
However I've ran into some problems:
1. How do I see the list of all my applications? I press the windows key
and then attempt to arrow around, but this does not work. I read
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