Anyone else experiencing a problem where you can't use speakupconf as a
normal user? After a recent kernel update, I find that I keep getting
permission errors when I use a normal user to set speakup settings from
speakupconf. If I do it from root, the script works fine. I used to be
able to do this from regular users but now now.
Any ideas?
On 12/21/14 02:06, Rob Hudson wrote:
Use the speakupconf script.
It comes as part of the speakup sources, under the tools directory. Copy
it to a location in your path, then set up speakup the way you like it.
When you run speakupconf save as root, a directory called /etc/speakup
is created. When you run it as a regular user, you get a directory
called .speakup under your home directory.
Once you have the settings saved, you can then load them again with
speakupconf load. You can put that command in your .bashrc file so you
get all your settings back upon login.
----- Original Message ----- From: "David" <BearSFO@xxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2014 12:31 AM
Subject: how to make settings 'stick'
Hi there -
Every time when I reboot my system I have to go and adjust the Speakup
settings like speech speed and volume and things like that, is there a
way to make these settings 'stick' so it will not be resetted at reboot?
thanks.
--David
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