[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: Tutorial wasRe: Iggdrasil, a new amazing screenreader



Is this acbradio, a podcast, radio program, linux application, or what?

acbradio has a main menu program and a large archive of programs from main
menu available for download. 



On Fri, Dec 31, 2021 at 3:26 PM Jude DaShiell <jdashiel@panix.com> wrote:
acbradio has a main menu program and a large archive of programs from main
menu available for download.  One of them has a debian install
demonstration in it and another one has a slackware demonstration install
in it.  It will not be easy to find them either but they're some of the
earlier programs in the archive.  More than that I cannot tell you.


On Fri, 31 Dec 2021, James AUSTIN wrote:

> Hi everyone
>
> Happy New Year to you all.
>
> I am really enjoying this discussion and also found it fascinating. I would like to use the command line more and while I have some experience with it much of what is being discussed here goes over my head.
>
> I am wondering if there are any tutorials available to help someone set a system such as the one being discussed up from scratch. Well I can access the command line from a GUI I am reliant upon a graphical user interface being pre-installed with orca before I can use the command line.
>
> I appreciate that historically Linux was viewed by many as a programmers operating system, but in recent years it has become much more user-friendly and available to every day computer users.
>
> Any pointers to tutorials to set this up from scratch from a blindness perspective it would be greatly appreciated.
>
> Thank you
>
> Warmest wishes
>
> James
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> > On 31 Dec 2021, at 05:16, Jordan Livesey <jordanlivesey9@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > That is why when you are just starting out on the console, and you know how to set up speak up,  the keyboard shortcuts for that only require you to hold down the caps lock key by default, when ever I do an install I always turn the volume up with caps lock and 2 to turn up the volume, but as a rule of thumb, I generally don?t need to use it as the terminal gets all the work I need done, a simple sudo aptitude update and sudo aptitude upgrade if needed if I check for updates which I do regularly
> >
> >> On 31 Dec 2021, at 03:14, Jeffery Mewtamer <mewtamer@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> Even with console applications, there are various toolkits that allow
> >> for the creation of pseudo-GUIs and many such applications do have a
> >> number of keyboard commands, though they don't always adhere to the
> >> conventions shared by most GUI applications(e.g. in the Nano text
> >> editor, save is ctrl+o, not ctrl+s, cut and paste are ctrl+k and
> >> ctrl+u instead of ctrl+x and ctrl+v, and find is ctrl+w instead of
> >> ctrl+f)
> >>
> >> Most such text-only GUIs are built on ncurses, and there are packages
> >> like dialog that allow shell scripts to  to display dialog boxes and
> >> scrollable menus.
> >>
> >> I also think it worth noting that, on most distros, there isn't just
> >> one console, but several and that you can easily switch between them
> >> with just a couple of key presses.
> >>
> >> As a general rule, each console is reference by the abbreviation tty
> >> followed by a number and if you're in one console, you switch to a
> >> different one by pressing alt+ the function key corresponding to the
> >> number of the console you want. The number varies from distro to
> >> distro, but 12 is common, one for each function key on a standard
> >> keyboard, though I understand setups with 24 and a distinction made
> >> between left alt and right alt when switching aren't uncommon. If
> >> you're running an Xserver, it takes up one of the consoles, and if
> >> you're in the GUI, you typically need to do trl+alt+fn to break out of
> >> the GUI and into the text consoles. If you start x manually, the
> >> xserver will be on whichever console you were on when you invoked
> >> startx, but if your system boots into the desktop automatically, which
> >> console is used for the GUI varies from distro to distro, though I
> >> believe tty1 and tty6 or tty7 are the most common.
> >>
> >> I usually have a stripped down Xserver running Firefox+Orca on tty1
> >> and use tty2+ for everything else... at the moment, I have:
> >>
> >> Firefox+Orca running on tty1
> >> aumix(a audio mixer) opened in tty2
> >> A text file open in nano on tty3
> >> tty4 at the command prompt in the directory where the text file that's
> >> open in tty3 is located, for easily running wc to get word count of
> >> the file without having to close and reopen my editor or if I need to
> >> pull up a different file to reference something.
> >> tty5 is open to the directory where Firefox dumps all of my downloads.
> >>
> >> and from Firefox, I just use ctrl+alt+F2-F5 to jump to aumix, the open
> >> text file, the directory where the file is saved, or my downloads
> >> directory, and can switch between any of those text consoles with just
> >> alt+a function key.
> >>
> >> And while I haven't use them, there are utilities like screen and some
> >> others to facilitate multi-tasking in a single console.
> >>
> >> And if things are properly configured, switching between the console
> >> running X and one of the text consoles should seamlessly switch
> >> between Orca and your console screen reader, though this can sometimes
> >> be tricky to get working right.
> >>
> >
>
>


Reply to: