In the root directory of the flash card put a empty file called ssh to enable the ssh server. This is a change rasbian made to the 11-25 release. The contents of the file do not matter, it just must be present. On Linux, mount /dev/xxx1 /mnt Touch /mnt/ssh Umount /mnt Replace /dev/xxx1 with the actual sdcard and and replace /mnt with the directory you actually mounted it at. In windows, just make a ssh file. Get a command prompt and type copy con e:\ssh Then type ctrl-z and press enter You will hear "1 file copied" Replace e with your actual drive letter. O -----Original Message----- From: blinux-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx [mailto:blinux-list-bounces@xxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Martin McCormick Sent: Tuesday, December 13, 2016 10:11 PM To: Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx> Subject: Re: More on Adding speakup to wheezy, Conditionally good news I didn't really have anything special on the newer pi so I downloaded the jessie lite image, unzipped it and then used dd to apply it to the SD card. In the past, after booting, I got the startup script by using ssh to get to pi@192.168.whatever. This has been quite accessible and I tell it to use the whole drive and set the time zone. This image is the one from November 25 and I can't ssh in to anything there. Is there any idea what I need to do to it to get it to come up via ssh? It does bring the wired ethernet interface to life but nothing talks to me on ssh. I even tried telnet and it immediately refused the connection so it appears to have some sanity. I mounted the SD card on a Linux system after doing the dd copy and it looks pretty normal. /boot presently is empty with no config.txt file in it. The documentation on the raspberry pi web site says you can do a headless install using the lite image. You just don't get orca which is okay right now. Martin Jeffery Mewtamer <mewtamer@xxxxxxxxx> writes: > Stuttering speech is a known issue on the Raspberry Pi with stock ALSA > and espeakup. You can Google the Raspberry VI website and mailing list > for more information, but the owner of Raspberry VI has produced a > fork of espeakup called piespeakup that bypasses the issues with the > ALSA drivers by rendering speech using the Pi's GPU. Running Orca with > a desktop still requires a dedicated sound adaptor, but piespeakup can > give you working console speech from boot without stutter. _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list