On Mon, Jun 23, 2008 at 11:05:14AM +0200, Daniel COTTO wrote:
> Bonjour,
> Il me faut installer un ubuntu hardy sur un laptop  from scratsh (cd
> desktop ou cd alternate).
> je dispose juste d'une alva port série type abt3.
> Quel sont les procédures à utiliser; Pour débian je sais que je ne
> dois faire qu'un brltty=al,ttyS0,fr_FR
> sous ubuntu ca n'as pas l'air de marcher ..

La pièce jointe pourra t'aider je pense.
Sinon, j'ai mis l'URL sur http://orca.blinuxman.net/ 

Aldo.
Title: Orca/UbuntuHardy - GNOME Live!

Downloading and Installing Ubuntu Hardy

Orca Logo

This page provides instructions for downloading and installing Ubuntu Hardy.

From http://mail.gnome.org/archives/orca-list/2008-May/msg00012.html:

Hi All:

I just want to get this out before I lose my notes.  I just went through 
an accessible install of Hardy using Orca and then also got the sysadmin 
apps working on the installed system.  Quick notes, and these are 
basically just a compilation of the stuff that's already been posted to 
this list (i.e., I cannot take credit):

INSTALL:

1) Download the iso from http://cdimages.ubuntu.com.  I grabbed the 
latest daily-live from a day or two ago.  Burn it, boot it.

2) When the CD stops whirring in the drive, press return.  You'll have 
just selected the "English" keyboard layout.  I don't know of an 
accessible way to select a different layout right now.

3) Press F5 to select the accessibility setup, then press 3 to select 
the screen reader option.  Press return to exit the accessibility setup.

4) Press the down arrow to select the install option and press return. 
The installer will come up and orca will be running.

5) Install your system - the installer could use some scripting to make 
things a bit more guided via orca, but for now just tab around to 
explore the windows.

6) Reboot.  When the system comes back up, you need to log in 
(silently), and Orca will automatically run when your desktop session 
comes up.

SYS ADMIN:

1) Create root's ~/.orbitrc file (/root/.orbitrc, with and owner.group 
of root.root with a mode of 644 on my system):

ORBIIOPIPv4=1
ORBIIOPUNIX=0

2) Use visudo to add the following line after the line with 
"env_reset" in it:

Defaults env_keep+="GTK_MODULES"

Everything else seems to have been taken care of by Luke and Ubuntu 
(thanks Luke!), at least for my decrepit Toshiba Tecra M2 laptop.

Will

Pulseaudio: The release of hardy switch to useing pulseaudio as it's default sound server.. For more information on pulseaudio, you can visit there home page at:

http://pulseaudio.org

This change is good because you should no be able to play audio and not lose speech. However: you should not try to build gnome-speech from source. Ubuntu modified the gnome-speech package so it would work with pulseaudio. IF you now try to build gnome-speech from source, you will break your system. Since Ubuntu provides packages that build the commercial drivers for synths like Cepstral Swift, this isn't a problem. Simply install and register your synth. Then install the gnome-speech package for the synth.

I order to test your synth to make sure it is registered and working, you can use the command line program provided with the synth. You will need to use the padsp program so the synth can speak via pulseaudio To test Swift: type the following command in a gnome terminal

padsp swift hello

If things are set up correctly, you should hear Swift say "hello".

To test DECtalk: type the following command in a gnome-terminal

padsp say

press enter. Type hello followed by enter. You should hear DECtalk say "hello" Press control d to tell DECtalk's say command you are done.

Once you have confirmed your synth is working, you can install the gnome-speech package so ORca can start using it.

For Cepstral Swift: gnome-speech-swift. For DECtalk: gnome-speech-dectalk. These packages are available from multiverse. Just make sure you have multiverse enabled and everything should just work.

Speech-dispatcher: The change to pulseaudio also effects speech-dispatcher. Since pulseaudio is started after you login, you will need to make sure speech-dispatcher starts after login as well. In order to do this, you should do the following. 1) install speech-dispatcher. From a terminal, type the following commands. sudo apt-get install speech-dispatcher sudo apt-get install python-speechd

2) Copy the default config to your home directory so speech-dispatcher can use it. In a terminal, type the following. Note the command is case sensitive. Replace $user with your login user name. cp -R /etc/speech-dispatcher /home/$user/.speech-dispatcher

3) Enable auto start of speech-dispatcher in your user session. Note: like above, the command is case sensitive. Replace $user with your login user name. Press alt-f1 to open the main menu. Press left arrow to move to system. Press down arrow to select preferences. Press right arrow to open preferences. Use up arrow to select sessions. Press enter to open the sessions dialog. Tab to the add button, and press the space bar to activate it. Fill in the dialog with the following options. For name: type speech-dispatcher for command: type speech-dispatcher -d -l 1 -C /home/$user/.speech-dispatcher Remember to replace $user with your login user name. Noet the c is uper case. For comment: type something like starts speech-dispatcher for the user. Select ok to close the add program dialog and save your changes. Select close to close the sessions dialog. log out and in again to make sure speech-dispatcher is started. Before you tell orca to use speech-dispatcher, use the spd-say command to make sure speech-dispatcher actually started. A command like spd-say hello in a terminal should cause espeak to say the word hello. If spd-say gives you an error, open the sessions dialog and correct any error you made from the above instructions. Instead of selecting add in the sessions dialog, down arrow through the table of apps until you select speech-dispatcher. Tab to edit and press space bar to open the edit dialog. The edit dialog is the same as the add dialog. Once you have corrected any mistake, log out and in again to see if your changes worked. As before use spd-say hello to test. Note: you could use any word instead of hello. 4) Tell orca to use speech-dispatcher. Once you have speech-dispatcher starting automatically, open the orca preferences and tell it to use speech-dispatcher instead of gnome-speech. See other pages on this wiki for instructions on using orca.


The information on this page and the other Orca-related pages on this site are distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Orca/UbuntuHardy (last edited 2008-06-04 02:55:11 by Kenny Hitt)

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