Hi, Aaron, There's not much need to make a talking bootdisk for Limbo. Speakup is included in the kernel that Red Hat ships. There are no Speakup keymaps in Anaconda, however. You can get around this by putting loadkeys and the old version of the Speakup keymap onto a floppy. When Anaconda starts up, take the defaults for language and keyboard. Then you can get to a shell on another console. Just mount the floppy and run loadkeys from there. One word of caution about Limbo. With the 686 and Athlon kernels, they've changed the timing to something like 1000Hz. This causes Speakup to be slow, choppy, and hard to use. You should be able to get relief by playing with the timing variables in /proc/speakup/<synth>, but I didn't have any luck. My solution was to install a 586 kernel. Once you're up and running, grab the kernel from Rawhide. That one has an up to date version of Speakup, so you can use the regular keymap. HTH. Bill On Tue, 9 Jul 2002, Aaron Howell wrote: > Hi there, > Is anyone looking at doing a talking boot disk for the beta redhat 7.3.92 (aka limbo)? > I'm wanting to test it at work if possible. > if not, is there a set of instructions (or even general hints) as to how to make one's own talking install disk and I'll endeavor to do it myself. > any advice much appreciated. > Regards > Aaron > >