Janina Sajka <janina at rednote.net> writes: > Because Chrome is self-voicing with Chrome Vox, Orca (and > Speech-Dispatcher/Espeak) should be disabled while Chrome has focus. The easiest solution is to disable Orca temporarily. AFAIK, there's no way to silence Speech Dispatcher. If you're using it as the output method for chromevox, you wouldn't want to do that anyway. I think there might be a way to customize Orca so that Orca is disabled when self-voicing apps like chromevox have focus. If there is, don't use it right now. Chromevox does not (yet) speak some browser dialogs. These can be read with Orca, however. Just enable it temporarily to read them. Yes, it's annoying! Here's my current setup. I run chromium + chromevox under a lightweight window manager, ratpoison. Chromevox uses Speech Dispatcher with eSpeak for speech. Yes, I'm not taking the perfectly sound advice I just gave in the previous paragraph, since I'm running without a desktop environment, and hence, without Orca. HTH, -- Chris