The c:> prompt speaks for me on my several systems. This could be very valuable for any DOS programs that one might have to run which work well from a command line. DOSEMU would not be as valuable, imho, for more elaborate applications such as WordPerfect 5.1, because we would not have access to the functionality provided by our old DOS screen readers such as asap and vocal-eyes. Much work went into providing "set files" which made various screens, such as the (F5) directory screen in WordPerfect, and the (Ctrl-F2) spell check screen speak more effectively. None of that functionality is immediately available in speakup. What would be cool, and should probably work, is to shut speakup off and actually run asap or vocal-eyes (or one of the others) with the old reliable DOS apps. Judging from the DOSEMU documentation, this would be possible--but would doubtless not share the synth with speakup, so one would need yet another hardware speech synthesizer on yet another port. Still in all, it is pretty darn cool, this DOSEMU thing. On Wed, 11 Jul 2001, Gregory Nowak wrote: > Hi All, > > I just installed dosemu. > Leaving speakup running to see what happens, I proceded to run it as I prepared to look for my floppy with provox7 on it. > To my surprise and delight, speakup spoke everything right up until the c prompt. > It continued speaking as I listed the directory > and did various other things until typing exitemu, and going back to the > bash prompt. Is this something that's known (speakup works under dosemu without the need for a dos screen reader), > or did I accidentally stumble across something new here? > Greg > > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup > -- Janina Sajka, Director Technology Research and Development Governmental Relations Group American Foundation for the Blind (AFB) Email: janina at afb.net Phone: (202) 408-8175 Chair, Accessibility SIG Open Electronic Book Forum (OEBF) http://www.openebook.org Will electronic books surpass print books? Read our white paper, Surpassing Gutenberg, at http://www.afb.org/ebook.html Download a free sample Digital Talking Book edition of Martin Luther King Jr's inspiring "I Have A Dream" speech at http://www.afb.org/mlkweb.asp Learn how to make accessible software at http://www.afb.org/technology/accessapp.html