Hello Samuel,

What I meant is that SLINT comes pre-installed and preconfigured with all
those console screen readers as well as emacspeak all preconfigured for the
user and two simple scripts that allow the user to switch screen readers by
just entering the name of the screen reader.

Additionally when emacspeak is switched on, the script asks if the user if
the voxin voices are going to be used.

Thirdly, the user can decide with scripts if he wishes to boot into just
console text mode or into the graphical environment. Many users rely on old
hardware that is slow in graphical environment but which are fast in text
console mode.

No distro war is being stirred up, but it would be wonderful if Debian had
these things set up for users who want them. Many of us struggle with
getting things to work.

It took me years to figure out how to install emacspeak and configure the
speech server. I understand it's much easier in Debian now, but it's as
easy as entering the command "switch-on emacspeak" and an emacs file is
produced with the right content and everything!

It took me years to figure out that some of the on line documentation for
emacspeak no longer applied.

Years of effort compared with one fast command "switch-on emacspeak" is a
huge difference.

The documentation is all in "slint-docs" excellently written and easy to
follow, right in the console.

Now if someone would give us a script to configure mutt and alpine
everything would be all done.

Debian could and probably will do all of this in ten years, and I'm looking
forward to it as once I found the Debian iso files with firmware, Debian
has been my favorite distribution but currently the latest Debian
installation DVD doesn't find my sound card and I have X org errors so I
cannot boot into Mate except by using root account. So until Debian starts
working for me again, I'm using SLINT.

But I can use the old Debian 9 and use that with my home files, just not
Debian 10.1. I'll have to find the time to reinstall the old Debian, I've
spent two weeks trying to install Debian 10.1 without screen reader and
then without graphics (except when using root). I love Debian but
accessibility is an after thought compared to Slint which has accessibility
as one of its primary goals.

Happy 2022!

David



On Thu, Dec 30, 2021, 02:10 Samuel Thibault <[email protected]> wrote:

> D.J.J. Ring, Jr., le mer. 29 déc. 2021 21:56:55 -0500, a ecrit:
> > Also with Slint, arguably the most accessible of them all, you have the
> choice
> > of various screen readers in console:
> >
> > espeakup (Console screen reader connecting espeak-ng and speakup)
> > fenrir (Modular, flexible and fast console screen reader)
> > speechd-up (Console screen reader connecting Speech Dispatcher and
> speakup)
>
> You also have the same choice on other distributions such as Debian.
>
> Please don't fall in a distro war, we don't need that.
>
> Samuel
>
>

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