To avoid all this, you could install cygwin, and just use SSH as you would from your linux side; Jaws will read the output with few to no errors. If cygwin wouldn't work, installing linux as a virtual machine, and ssh'ing to your server, would work well enough. I haven't the foggiest as how to send keystrokes from your system through to your linux machine, so that Speakup thinks you're typing on the keyboard. Suggestions on that would be extremely helpful. (Possibly a ps2 emulator software device?) However, there's no reason you couldn't write a wrapper around /dev/softsynth, to read the outgoing audio, pipe it through something like voxen or ttsynth (or festival, for something free), and send that to a shoutcast input, and stream that mp3 to your windows box... I hope this was partially clear. Kirk or Randy might be able to provide more information, as one of them gave me the softsynth idea. Brandon McGinty-Carroll On Sat, May 19, 2012 at 09:45:36AM -0700, Hart Larry wrote: > Hi All: Well, seeming a strange inquiree, I am going out-of-town > with a windows laptop, however, its quite `frustrating telnetting or > ssh to my shell-account, reading in windows. Because I have an > authorized copy of JAWS, I cannot re-partission its hard-drive. So > some1 in our LUG suggested Colinux. In addtion I am considering > running GRML as a live-cd, but I don't know if I could get speech in > a live version? So I got to wonder if I could run Speakup with good > sounding Eliquence or DecTalk speech from a server, like the > windows, screen-Access2Go? There look to be newer versions of both > GRML and Colinux. Thanks in advance for any solutions, which maybe I > could take a laptop to our LUG next Saturday-and-configure. > Hart > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup