It may be different for others, but I find it much easier to work with written documents. Would that be more work or trouble than you want to do on this? (I haven't done one, but would guess the work of making a podcast would be different but not necessarily less.) Anyway, just a thought. Al -----Original Message----- From: Speakup [mailto:speakup-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Arthur Pirika Sent: Friday, December 07, 2012 12:29 AM To: Speakup at linux-speakup.org Subject: ArchLinux tutorials, and the state of accessibility in linux Hi, First, I'm playing with arch again, and still loving it, I think of it as slackware, done right. Not that slackware's bad, by any stretch, it was my first distro, after all. Anyway, I'm about to record a step-by-step install guide, similar to what Michael Whapples did quite some time ago, now that arch's install methods changed again. I was then thinking of expanding it into something like the really old shows that featured on main menu, way back in 2000, through 2002 or so. So it would be a podcast of getting around, and doing common tasks in linux, focusing on the terminal at first. Thoughts or feedback? Second, what are peoples experience with tools like emacspeak, speech-dispatcher, and gnome/KDE accessibility, things you don't hear a lot about these days? Are they still viable options for access, especially emacspeak? Thanks, Arthur _______________________________________________ Speakup mailing list Speakup at linux-speakup.org http://linux-speakup.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/speakup