?What's the difference between it and the original dec pc? On Sat, 1 May 2004, Adam Myrow wrote: > For anybody who has the Dectalk PC 2 rather than the original Dectalk PC, > I want to post what I had to do to get it working, and point out a slight > bug in Speakup. First, I re-built my kernel with all of Speakup as > modules. Next, I downloaded the dec_pc.tar.gz file from the Speakup FTP > sight and unpacked it in /usr/local/lib/dec_pc. Next, I modified the > dec_pc.conf file, changing the top line to "io=0x260" which reflects the > setting of my Dectalk PC. After attempts to load the Dectalk drivers > resulted in no speech, I decided to copy the drivers that I already have > for my Dectalk PC2 in place of the supplied drivers. Thus, I replaced the > following files with my versions. kernel.sys, lts.exe, ph.exe, and > cmd.exe. Lastly, I copied the file dtpcdic.dic and renamed it to > dtpc.dic. this replaced the dtpc.dic supplied with the archive. After > all that, I could successfully run the command "dtload -t" and type text > and have it echoed back. However, when I tried to load the Speakup > module, I got errors to the effect that Speakup couldn't find the Dectalk > PC. It turns out that Speakup doesn't recognize 0x260 as a valid address > for the Dectalk PC. The solution is to modify line 30 of speakup_decpc.c > to add 0x260 to the list of base addresses and re-build the kernel and > modules. Actually, you may be able to get away with just re-building the > modules, but I went ahead and rebuilt the kernel as well to be safe. The > new line 30 looks like this. > static int synth_portlist[] = { 0x340, 0x350, 0x240, 0x250, 0x260, 0 }; > > Now, my Dectalk PC works! The only gripe I have is that words with > apostrophes aren't pronounced correctly. It's treating apostrophes as > spaces, so that "it's" gets spoken as "it s." Also, there is no pause > between sentences. The sluggishness mentioned in the Readme isn't as bad > as I was expecting from reading list archives. Anyway, thanks to all > those who have helped in supporting various synthesizers in Speakup and > especially those who are working on making software synthesizers work. > While I personally prefer hardware synthesizers, having the option of > using software synthesizers will open Speakup to a lot more users, and > thus, Linux in turn. > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >