speakup on fedora?

hank hank at hanksmith.net
Tue May 18 04:58:12 UTC 2004


it isn't switching me
my swap thing comes up
I am runnig fedoria on a amd 233 mhz 64 megs ram
is that the problem?
thanks
hank
Don't judge me because I'm blind. Judge me by what's inside. if you judge me because I am blind, then it is you who is blind.
"time is the fire in which we burn," Tollian Soran.
"grudges aren't worth holding--One who holds them shows his self-weakness."
Contact info:
hank at hanksmith.net
Email: Same as MSN.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Roy Nickelson 
  To: Linux for blind general discussion 
  Sent: Monday, May 17, 2004 9:18 PM
  Subject: Re: speakup on fedora?


  follow the instruction in the howto exactly I just told you to use the control +alt combination because it is what is normally used to switch to a differrent concole in linux.  I don't know if it works in your case or not bot it probably does.
  roy

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: hank 
    To: Linux for blind general discussion 
    Sent: Monday, May 17, 2004 11:53 PM
    Subject: Re: speakup on fedora?


    and then what do I need to do from there to get this thing working?
    Don't judge me because I'm blind. Judge me by what's inside. if you judge me because I am blind, then it is you who is blind.
    "time is the fire in which we burn," Tollian Soran.
    "grudges aren't worth holding--One who holds them shows his self-weakness."
    Contact info:
    hank at hanksmith.net
    Email: Same as MSN.
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Roy Nickelson 
      To: Linux for blind general discussion 
      Sent: Monday, May 17, 2004 8:49 PM
      Subject: Re: speakup on fedora?


      hi,
      you need to press alt + control +f2 use the alt and control on the left of the spacebar. 
      Roy

        ----- Original Message ----- 
        From: hank 
        To: Linux for blind general discussion 
        Sent: Monday, May 17, 2004 11:44 PM
        Subject: speakup on fedora?


        hello
        how do I get speak up speaking when fedora boots?
        it isn't speaking at all
        and the directions don't work on setting that up
        Creating an INITRD

        Follow these steps to create an initial ram disk image for your installation. This is how we make Speakup speak while your computer boots now that Speakup
        is modular. Of course, if we were smarter people, we would have modified the installation scripts to do this for you automatically based on the Speakup
        synthesizer keyword you provided back when you first started the installation.. But, ... well let's not go there!
        List of 5 items
        1. Switch to the second console by holding down the Alt key and pressing theF2 key. When you release these you'll find that you're at a # prompt.
        2. Change to the directory that contains your new installation by typing:
        cd /mnt/sysimage
        3. Now, restrict your view to your installation by typing the following command. Notice that your prompt changes when you do this.
        chroot .
        4. Next, change directory one more time by typing:
        cd /lib/modules
        5. Now, make a new initrd with Speakup by issuing the following command. Where wis command has {TAB} you should press the TAB key. Don't actually type {TAB}!
        And, where we have {synth.keyword}, replace this text with the correct sSpeakup word for your speech synthesizer.
        /sbin/mkinitrd -v -f /boot/initrd-{tab} --with=speakup_{synth.keyword} {TAB}
        list end

        Here's an example of how this command looks for the Accent SA speech synthesizer and the 2.4.22-2c.nptlspk2 Speakup Modified Fedora Linux kernel:
        List of 1 items
        . /sbin/mkinitrd -v -f /boot/initrd-2.4.22-2c.nptlspk2.img --with=speakup_acntsa 2.4.22-2c.nptlspk2
        list end

        Use your Speakup screen review commands to read up the screen when this command completes. If you see references to your speech synthesizer, you've correctly
        completed this critical step in your installation process.

        Notice, also, how we used the TAB key to fill out that long and complicated Linux kernel designation for us. Not only do we save some typing by using TAB.
        We also avoid critical errors. Remember this trick. You can use it almost everywhere in Linux when issuing commands and when specifying files. It's a very
        handy feature that you'll never outgrow.

        Killing First Boot To Insure Speakup Speaks

        There is one more very critical step to perform before you boot your installation. Be sure you are still in the restricted view obtained by the first three
        steps of the previous command when you issue this last, very critical command:
        List of 1 items
        . /sbin/chkconfig --level 2345 firstboot off
        list end

        If you fail to do this step you will find that Speakup suddenly stops speaking just when it seems you've finished booting your new installation of Linux.
        That's because of the graphical (and inaccessible) FirstBoot program Red Hat provides to help users define some important configuration settings, such
        as creating users and identifying how this computer connects to the Internet. Unfortunately, FirstBoot launches before any consoles launch, so there is
        absolutely nothing you can do as a blind user once FirstBoot is running either to work with FirstBoot or to get out of it.


        I couldn't even get that portion to work
        is there a easier way to fix this?
        I all ready bootted the system
        thanks
        hank
        Don't judge me because I'm blind. Judge me by what's inside. if you judge me because I am blind, then it is you who is blind.
        "time is the fire in which we burn," Tollian Soran.
        "grudges aren't worth holding--One who holds them shows his self-weakness."
        Contact info:
        hank at hanksmith.net
        Email: Same as MSN.


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