You're not going to mess anything up by becoming an ordinary user. But, perhaps you don't have accessibility installed and adapting that could take you into a thicket--arguably. So, the Fry's box is a good bet. If you want to look at Fedora, look at the Speakup Modified Fedora Distribution: http://www.linux-speakup.org/ftp/disks/fedora We have a installation HOWTO there: http://www.linux-speakup.org/ftp/disks/fedora/HOWTO_INSTALL.html The idea is that the installation process, as well as the result, is speech enabled with Speakup. One can also, of course, do this with Slack or Debian or Gentoo--but no installation HOWTO, so you might want to look at ours even if you install one of the other distributions. Butch Bussen writes: > Actually, I plan on installing a Linux box just to run on its own, but > this one is operational, and I'm afraid to mess with it for fear of > breaking something that is working. f y i, i r l p is internet radio > linking project and is used by ham radio people to tie repeater systems > and so forth together via the internet. All of the supporting software is > done in Linux. Some of it, as I understand, is specialized code. > Actually, I picked up a cheap computer at Fries last week end. It has > some offbrand of a gui Linux on it I've never heard of, so plan on blowing > all that away and installing fedora or possibly slackware. I looked > around slackware's page and didn't really see anything about speech. > > Anyhow, that is where I am at the moment. > 73s > Butch Bussen > wa0vjr > > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup -- Janina Sajka, Chair Accessibility Workgroup Free Standards Group (FSG) janina at freestandards.org Phone: +1 202.494.7040