Hi B.H.

No it doesn't have a CLI to speak of, although there are a number of command line 
utilities and there is support for a "frontend control socket" (see 
http://www.mythtv.org/docs/mythtv-HOWTO-11.html#ss11.5). There is also a web interface 
called mythweb where you can browse program listings, manage recordings, and some limited 
configuration after you've done most of the setup/configuration in mythtv-setup.

HTH,
Helen

On 12/22/2012 05:13 PM, B. Henry wrote:

does this software have a CLI, or is this only interacted with via the qt 
interface?
I am a native English speaker, but speak more Spanish than English these days, 
for some years now, so perhaps I could be of some assistance.
I don't currently have a version of Ubuntu that allows the use of the latest 
Orca and thus QT however. This will be changing soon, but for now I'm using a 
combination of 10.04 and 11.04 and xdesktop orca.
Sounds very interesting, and I'll for sure be giving this a try when possible.
--
Regards,
B.H.



On 12/22/2012 03:45 PM, faginbagin wrote:
I'd like to announce Mythspeech, which makes it easier for the blind and/or 
visually impaired to use MythTV, an open source DVR (digital video recorder).

Information about MythTV can be found here: http://www.mythtv.org/
It is supported by Ubuntu and there is a Ubuntu based distribution customized 
specifically for MythTV, Mythbuntu: http://www.mythbuntu.org/

More details about Mythspeech can be found here: 
http://www.mythtv.org/wiki/MythSpeech

Mythspeech is not a perfect solution, but I'm told by one user:
"Maria is VERY happy with her talking MythTV, and it has made her life so much 
easier!"

How imperfect is the current implementation of mythspeech? One glaring example 
is that it cannot help with the initial setup and configuration of MythTV. I 
think you will need some vision or a friend or family member who can help with 
this step.

I would very much like to talk to developers with experience in accessibility. 
The current implementation of Mythspeech builds on MythTV's support for LCD 
displays and uses speech-dispatcher's API, but I'm thinking a better long term 
approach might be to implement Qt's accessibility classes. MythTV is a Qt 
application, but it does not use Qt widgets.

I would also like to know if there are interested users whose first language is 
not English. MythTV has been translated into many languages, and mythspeech 
should be able to speak in those languages, if they are supported by 
speech-dispatcher. But there are some things that could be improved if there is 
interest.

Of course, I welcome any and all feedback, bug reports, etc.

Regards,
Helen




--
Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility

Reply via email to