Personally, I use Slackware 9.0. I haven't, however, played around with the gnome accessibility that I have heard is included. I did try Redhat 8, but I found Speakup to be very slow, whereas the rest of the system ran normally. I especially noticed this when using the review cursor to read a character at a time. I haven't tried Debian yet, as the bootable CD doesn't have a Speakup kernel, at least not one that I can find, and the boot floppies on the Speakup web site are for the previous version. Well, hope this helps, and if anyone knows where I can get a Debian installation CD set that includes a Speakup enabled kernel, please let me know. I would love to try it. Lorenzo E Pluribus Unix On Fri, 28 Mar 2003, Mirabella, Mathew J wrote: > ok folks. I need to pose a question to you all that I have already asked before, and the responses some time ago suggested that redhat may be the best way to go... things may have changed since folks on the speakup list are talking about the lack of built in speakup support with new versions of redhat. > So. the question is... for a blind person, new to linux wanting to have a speech based system with emacspeak and speakup and wanting to start taking advantage of newer stuff with gnome etc. and also wanting good support of new hardware... which linux distro would people recommend. > I am hearing that slackware or debian or redhat are the three that most people seem to use, with redhat looking a bit shakey lately. slackware 9 seems to have the newest gnome stuff...??? > or maybe people think that redhat 7.3 with a speakup kernel is the best way to go? > please give me your thoughts. > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >