Re: Videocall hearing the voice of Orca
On 7/9/22 04:45, john doe wrote: How can I ensure that I'm the only one that will hear Orca and prevent other persons in the call from hearing it? I turn speech off during online meetings and use only the braille display. This eliminates the problem you describe. More importantly, it frees my hearing to listen exclusively to the meeting participants.
Re: Videocall hearing the voice of Orca
I wonder then if a throat microphone would help. That is a microphone that rests on your larynx. Glenn - Original Message - From: "Sam Hartman" To: "Debian Accessibility Team" Sent: Thursday, September 08, 2022 12:34 PM Subject: Re: Videocall hearing the voice of Orca > "john" == john doe writes: john> Hello all, I use Orca to do some videocalling, the issue that john> I'm having is that voice of Orca is also audible at the other john> end. john> How can I ensure that I'm the only one that will hear Orca and john> prevent other persons in the call from hearing it? Use a bluetooth headset withd pipewire. I find Pulse's bluetooth support is not good enough for quality calls. Alternatively use a USB headset with either Pulse or Pipewire. The point is that you don't want your microphone to be able to pick up audio from your screen readers.
Re: Videocall hearing the voice of Orca
> "john" == john doe writes: john> Hello all, I use Orca to do some videocalling, the issue that john> I'm having is that voice of Orca is also audible at the other john> end. john> How can I ensure that I'm the only one that will hear Orca and john> prevent other persons in the call from hearing it? Use a bluetooth headset withd pipewire. I find Pulse's bluetooth support is not good enough for quality calls. Alternatively use a USB headset with either Pulse or Pipewire. The point is that you don't want your microphone to be able to pick up audio from your screen readers.