It is probably a conflict with pulseaudio and alsa. Right now I am a
little fuzzy on the details but I believe that orca and gnome load pulse
drivers and espeak needs alsa. You can test whether this is the problem
by not logging into the GUI before running espeak. So at the gnome login
screen, press control+alt+f1 to get to the console, log in and start
espeakup. Then go back to the login screen by pressing control+alt+f7
and log into the gui. Make sure orca is running. Then go back once again
to the console by pressing control+alt+f1. At this point, I will bet
that software speech is not working for you.
I think you can fix this by recompiling espeakup to default to using
pulseaudio. Instructions for that are somewhere on google. If you can't
find them, I can probably dig them out again.
On 06/24/2015 02:34 AM, Brandon Keith Biggs wrote:
Hello,
I just installed debian and can't figure out how to get speakup to work.
I type ctrl+meta+f1 to open the terminal, then I type espeakup. I get
the message that espeakup is already running. But I can't get any output
from typing or moving around. I know speakup is running because I have
it in a VM and sometimes speakup and Orca like to say random words and
speakup just said something to me, but I can't hear anything. I also
don't get speech on any log-in screen.
Thanks,
--
John Heim, jheim@xxxxxxxxxxxxx, skype:john.g.heim
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