Hello,
Just curious, why would you want to do this?
Most older braille displays don't have 64-bit drivers, so your solution,
if possible, would only work on 32-bit windows. If you just want to
experiment, you could just as well use JAWS 10 or earlier, which don't
require the driver being signed.
With kind regards,
Henk.
Velegi István schreef op 4/19/2014 1:13 AM:
Hi All,
Thank you for your answers.
I have an idea to solve this problem. I know it's quite complicated
but it may
work.
First, I would emulate a serial port for which jaws could send the
data of a known braille display which has signed jaws driver, e.g.
Braille lite or powerbraille.
Then I would make a program which receives the information from the
port and emulates a known display for Jaws.
Finally I would implement an algorithm to make it possible to
communicate with brltty.
For this, the powerbraille would be the best, because it has parallel
support on Jaws, and it has the widest range of functions which a
braille display can have in general: navigating buttons, cursor
routing keys.
In Jaws, only a known braille display (mentioned above) would be
necessary to be added.
What do you think about this?
Greetings,
Istvan
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