I've thought about it, but haven't taken any time to set it up.
In particular, I don't build my own kernels and haven't found a good way to get Speakup running on mainstream Fedora. I also haven't dug into the best setup for YASR on a modern distro (I.e. no hardware synth, pulse and speech-dispatcher.)
On 05/17/2016 01:00 PM, Burt Henry
wrote:
Not an answer to your question, but have you considered using consoles and speakup, or even yasr instead of terminal emulators? I've found over the years that the majority of CLI applications are more comfortable to use in log-in ttys, i.e. the consoles one accesses by pressing control alt f1-f6 or control alt f2-f7 depending on your distro/where the gui is launched. There are some advantages to using terminal emulators, e.g. the ease of copy and paste between the cli ap and gui programs, but I find any disadvantages more than made up for with the better performance I get in the console. I've started auto log-in to a few consoles on distros such as Vinux where a DM launches the graphical desktop by default. One has already entered their password to log-in to the GUI session, and thus can open a terminal emulator with no additional PW or other security measures involved, so I don't see how I'm more vulnerable with the auto-log-in. On my Arch and Debian boxes I start the GUI on demand, so can't auto-log-in with out weakening security of course. |