Hi Use rawWrite for Windows, its a lot easier for Windows screen reader users and I haven't heard of a failure yet. Isn't it: text speakup_synth......and not linux? -----Original Message----- From: speakup-admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:speakup-admin at braille.uwo.ca]On Behalf Of Janina Sajka Sent: 24 November 2001 16:02 To: speakup at braille.uwo.ca Subject: Re: Another newbie On Sat, 24 Nov 2001, Jack Daniels wrote: > >> I have a very small PC installed with > >> Redhat 7.1, kernal 2.4.2-12 running on a P133 with no CDROM. > >> What I want to be able to do is to insert a floppy with Speakup and any > >> necessary boot files and have Linux come up talking. Is this possible? It seems to me you could get this working with the standard installation floppy that one would create using boot.img. There are such on the speakup website and they already have speakup built into them. You need two files from the speakup site to test this: the appropriate boot.img and rawrite.exe. 1.) rawrite.exe is a DOS executable for creating floppy disks from image files like boot.img. Shutdown your Windows to MS-DOS before using rawrite for best, most reliable results; 2.) Get boot.img via anonymous ftp from: www.linux-speakup.org/pub/speakup/disks/redhat/7.2 Regretably, the rawrite.exe isn't there, and perhaps that's an oversight. Bill, are you listening? If you decide to try my suggestion, perhaps someone can point you to a download location closer to home, but you can certainly get it from redhat.com. It'll be in a dos_utils directory. There should be no problem using 7.2 disks on your 7.1 system, by the way; 3.) You need to be careful about your speech synthesizer while using rawrite. Generally, it's a good idea to kill speech while rawrite is creating your floppy. So, as you hit enter on the last rawrite prompt, which is the third prompt it gives you, be ready to kill your speech immediately; 54.) If nothing went wrong in the rawrite floppy you'll have a bootable floppy that you can try on your linux system. As you boot, monitor the floppy disk for activity. If your system beeps as it begins to load the OS, that will help. There will be a brief amount of floppy disk activity at this point and then the disk stops. You're at a boot> prompt which doesn't talk (though it could, see below); At this point type: linux -s speakup_synth=dectlk speakup_ser=1 I believe that even with the mismatch in installation versions this should still come up talking. If it does, you can certainly look around natively, and you can begin to contemplate getting a native kernel with speakup onto your system. But, that's a topic for another day. Certainly, there will be a good number of things that won't work because of the kernel mismatches. But, you should have enough to get started with. PS: The boot> prompt can be made to speak to any serial device with an appropriate lin in the sysconfig file on the floppy: serial=1,9600N8 would be the appropriate lin in this instance, and you could certainly insert this line using a DOS text editor. It goes just above the first "label" statement. _______________________________________________ Speakup mailing list Speakup at braille.uwo.ca http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup