Re: Debian with Orca

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    The pipewire-pulse process is a replacement for pulse audio functionality.


On 10/9/23 03:54, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Hi,

The default setting in Bookworm is to have in /etc/speech-dispatcher/speechd.conf:
AudioOutputMethod "pulse"
Pipewire is not listed among the possibilities and after having started orca,
"ps -ef | grep pipewire" come empty. Orca --version says: 43.1

So if pipewire can be used in this context (which I do not know), this is not
out of the box.

Cheers,
Didier


Le 09/10/2023 à 04:34, Linux for blind general discussion a écrit :
d    I think Bookworm uses Pipewire, so on my system there is a process called
pipewire-pulse.  I don't think you have to have pulse audio running at all.  I
may have disabled it using 'systemctl' or uninstalled it, but I can't remember
at the moment.



On 10/8/23 10:52, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Hi,

I happen to have Debian 12 Bookworm installed in a Qemu virtual machine, so
tried, using lightdm as login manager and mate as desktop.

Orca was already installed, but not started in mate

  From mate-terminal I could install espeakup typing as root:
apt-get install espeakup.

Then as advised edited /etc/modules to include a line with:
speakup_soft

I did not edit /etc/default/espeakup as in this VM there is only one virtual
sound card and did not care for which voice to use.

Then switching to tty2 pressing ctrl-alt-f2 did indeed make espeakup talking in
this console.

But if I start Orca in mate-terminal I can't get speech in the text console.

This reminds me a discussion I had with Samuel long ago: as is a default setting
in Slint I suggested to also include in Debian a line like this in
/etc/pulse/default.pa to redirect the pulse's output stream to alsa's mixer,
thus avoiding that both pulse and alsa claim the same card:

load-module module-alsa-sink device=dmix


This was not accepted for some reason that I do not recall exactly.

However you could instead try to use one of the other screenreaders as stated in
the Debian wiki. Caveat: I did not try these other methods.

Cheers,
Didier

Le 08/10/2023 à 15:37, Linux for blind general discussion a écrit :
      In order to have speech in the text consoles, you need to make sure Speakup
or BRLTTY or another screenreader is active.  It works just fine with Speakup.
You may want to read the Debian accessibility FAQ.

This is the section on Speech support.

https://wiki.debian.org/accessibility#Speech_Support

ORCA will be on console 7 by default, and you can easily switch to a text
console and have both working at the same time.



On 10/7/2023 1:54 PM, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
In a seemingly endless trek to get both Windows 11 and debian
Linux from a 3-year-old laptop I recently acquired, I had been
trying to install debian Linux with orca on to a large-capacity
thumb drive.  The debian bullseye installs were taking as long as
twelve hours or so to do and when I finally got one to finish, it
was as slow as molasses in January or the same thing in July in
the Southern hemisphere and was completely useless except for ssh
logins from another computer using the command-line or console
mode.

      Orca never did anything except an occasional halting
error message.

      Finally, I took a one-terabyte Crucial (Brand name) usb
drive and decided to try that.  The twelve-hour marathon reduced
to less than an hour and the orca installation is talking as well
as it does on a desktop system, here.  The real problem was the
slowness of data transfer in and out of the usb thumb drive.  The
orca screen reader and mate terminal are responding nicely and fast
and all seems well so far.

      Now for some questions:

      I am not new to orca but, in the couple of years I have
been trying it on the desktop and now, the laptop, I really miss
having a command-line console which I can get with no problem if
I ssh in to either orca system with a command-line Linux box.

      This is the standard debian install installation image
one can download and it found the laptop sound interface without
any special measures such as installing a usb sound card .  On
some systems, you do get command-line consoles by pressing Control+Alt+F2
and you can go back to the GUI by Control+Alt+f1.  I think there are
maybe 5 more command-line consoles in which speakup talks.  On
this installation, Control+Alt+f2 prompts one to type a command or ESC to
exit.  One of the other just kills speech and nothing much seems
to happen.  Like the spoiled rich kid on Christmas morning, I
want it all but not in a nasty way so I am not complaining.  If
necessary, I could get another hopefully fast usb drive and
install debian without the GUI and get the consoles but since this
is a laptop, every extra piece of gear makes it less portable.
Also, Every instance of Linux one makes will have a different ssh
host key unless one copies the same key to all instances.
Otherwise the systems you are using ssh to talk to think
something's wrong when they see the different host keys.

      I would also like to say some good words about slint.  I
was able to get a command-line set of consoles but the only way I
could get anything to talk was to plug in a usb sound card.  One
such card was a Creative Labs SoundBlaster series usb sound card
which worked perfectly for the speakup voice plus I also tried
another very inexpensive sound card which also worked with no
difference between the Creative Labs and the sound card whose
name escapes me, but slint couldn't automatically find this
laptop's built-in sound card.

      Everything else in slint that I tried appears to have no
problems .

      Sound system hardware is so proprietary that audio issues
in Linux are like grains of sand on the beach, common and gritty
when you have to deal with them.

      So, my primary question is am I missing something about
the command consoles?  The mate terminal seems to be working but
it's not quite the same as a command-line console.

Martin
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