dedication & hard work in the
Ubuntu project and outside it.
Good luck with your new endeavors!
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the indicator
area, but this possibility is now not working?
The shortcuts are not working anymore, and I think that's caused by the
switch to indicators (it lost several other features because of that
switch), but not 100% sure.
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shortcuts, although listed in the Preferences,
don't work with the indicator applet, so maybe that's the real bug? :-(
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Jan Claeys schreef op do 14-04-2011 om 12:33 [+0200]:
My Lucid system I like the Tomboy panel applet, because if I press
Alt+F12 key combination, I see my notes, easy to add a note, etc.
It seems like those shortcuts, although listed in the Preferences,
don't work with the indicator
Luca Ferretti schreef op wo 03-11-2010 om 21:34 [+0100]:
PS keyboard shortcut issue was reported a long time ago, but it seems
nobody took care :(
Do you know the bug number?
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not a specialist of braille terminals, but it looks like
it's still present in Lucid and Maverick (through F5 / Braille
terminal).
Mattias, can you please try the above?
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this was somewhat useful for you...
-Original Message-
From: Jan Claeys [mailto:li...@janc.be]
Sent: Wednesday, September 29, 2010 10:43 PM
To: ubuntu-accessibility@lists.ubuntu.com
Cc: mattias
Subject: Re: Server edition
Op woensdag 22-09-2010 om 11:31 uur [tijdzone +0200], schreef
Op donderdag 30-09-2010 om 03:44 uur [tijdzone +0200], schreef Jan
Claeys:
Okay, so I tried this in a virtual machine and it's a bit complicated,
I also found a bug while trying this:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/brltty/+bug/651707
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orca
enabled normally).
Also, I have worked with people who could see something (e.g. things
like general window layout) but not always all the details.
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mattias can clarify that)?
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will be
used for searches.
Note: a database in this context just means a specific dictionary,
e.g. something like English-German Freedict dictionary.
I hope this helps...
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: an accessibility track means that those talks would be part of
the main tracks, but of course an accessibility devroom could be an
alternative or addition, so maybe talk about this to accessibility
people in other projects too.
I hope I will see some of you at next year's FOSDEM !
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...@lists.ubuntu.com
Modify settings or unsubscribe at:
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/sounder
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? The windows
equivalent allows the user to enter the unicode value for the
character but I don't see anything like that here.
If you know the hexadecimal Unicode number of the character, you can
use Ctrl+Shift+U, then enter the hexadecimal number, followed by space
or return.
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looking in the wrong place.
You can set the default sound card in the file ~/.asoundrc
(And maybe there are some tools to help with that?)
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menus in Ubuntu, somewhere under:
System -- Preferences -- Accessibility -- ...
(I'm not sure what the last submenu is named in English exactly, as my
locale is in Dutch, but I could find out if needed...)
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run your own local dictionary server on your computer by
installing the 'dictd' package:
sudo apt-get install dictd
The data files for the actual dictionaries are all in packages that
start with dict-.
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On do, 2007-02-22 at 21:25 +0100, Henrik Nilsen Omma wrote:
Via Voice is outdated on Linux
Based on what I see on the IBM site, I think it's the same version as on
Windows, *but* there is no desktop-user product for linux based on it
anymore...
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/embedded_viavoice_multiplatform/
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functions
only, so I think it should be possible to make it callable from C
code[*], and most programming languages have facilities to call into C
libraries but not (easily) into C++ ones.
[*] as explained in http://72.5.124.65/sunstudio/articles/mixing.html
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PaHost_OpenStream: ERROR - result = -1
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Op dinsdag 05-12-2006 om 14:11 uur [tijdzone +], schreef Jonathan
Duddington:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED],
Jan Claeys [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Unfortunately, it seems like eSpeak only (tries to) use OSS.
Text-to-speech is basically a function that translates input data
(text
extra RAM is
needed for the accessibility extras (speech synthesis etc.).
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Op zaterdag 14-10-2006 om 12:47 uur [tijdzone +0300], schreef Veli-Pekka
Tätilä:
Jan Claeys wrote:
You might want to have a look at fte-console and/or fte-terminal.
Thanks for the tips. I've installed both now but the trouble is I cannot
find them. The commands fte-console or fte-terminal
Op dinsdag 10-10-2006 om 16:26 uur [tijdzone +0200], schreef Samuel
Thibault:
Since it is for graphical interfaces, glade is graphical.
Glade-the-application is graphical, but .glade files are just XML of
course. I'm not sure what's easiest to edit for someone who's blind?
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new keyboards have them
these days).
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to other places in the file system.
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of the installation procedure (and after waiting long
enough, of the PC), and the other drive in the same PC worked fine.
I'm not sure whether this was maybe caused by some dirt on the CD or
dirt on the cd-player's lens or something else.
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/search?q=python+unicode
Especially: http://www.amk.ca/python/howto/unicode
And more on: http://wiki.python.org/moin/Unicode
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is that a significant number of blind people weren't born
blind, and those people (especially the elderly?) don't always have the
courage to start learning to read write again.
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