Before saying more on this it may be worth reading the speechd-up documentation http://cvs.freebsoft.org/doc/speechd-up/. The problems page may describe what's going on better. I also will have a good read of it before saying more.
I don't know about the possibility of posting to the speakup list without being subscribed, I guess probably not as it has some stupid limitations. Unless there is anything to do in GRML's swspeak I would suggest possibly moving this to the speakup list. Michael Whapples On 28/05/09 13:02, Hermann wrote: > On 28.05.2009 at 13:38:56 Michael Whapples<[email protected]> wrote: > [...] > >> Regarding the replacing of speakup's tables, I thought speechd-up did >> that, may be I am thinking of 0.4, have you tried updating speechd-up to >> that (it would require compiling it from source as GRML comes with >> speechd-up 0.3). >> > I tried both versions, but the same result: > In general, when Speechd-up is used, the German text is spoken well, > except the punctuation chars and the numbers, and with the two letters > "a" and "z", the latter you mentioned. > When moving the cursor char by char, those strange char naming comes > up, due to the fact, that chars of>127 are not recognized. > The difference to Espeakup is, that, out of the box, it doesn't work at > all in German, and when the characters file is adjusted, it spells right > when moving cursor-left-right, but it doesn't read the umlauts when > reading German text. This all is fixed for Espeak since 0.6 together with the > modified characters file. > So my conclusion is, that the main issue is in Speakup, since everything > works well when I use built-in speech support of Brltty or Suse-Blinux. > I hope I could clarify things a bit. > Is it possible to write to the Speakup list when one is not subscribed? > Because I didn't use Speakup for a while, I left the list. > Hermann > _______________________________________________ Grml mailing list - [email protected] http://lists.mur.at/mailman/listinfo/grml join #grml on irc.freenode.org grml-devel-blog: http://grml.supersized.org/
