Re: Orca Accessibility with System Admin Tools
- From: Cody Hurst <churst35 verizon net>
- To: Willie Walker <William Walker Sun COM>
- Cc: Ubuntu-accessibility lists ubuntu com, Orca List <orca-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: Orca Accessibility with System Admin Tools
- Date: Wed, 03 Jan 2007 19:09:28 -0500
Hello,
Actually there is an even easier way I have found. I stole it from the
idea of installing ubuntu. Rather than enabling the root account, open a
shell, switch to root (sudo su), killall orca, and then launch orca.
This will start orca as root. you won't have speech just yet, so press
ctrl+shift+t and type sudo su again so you become root. if you know the
command or program name of a program that needs to run as root type it
and press enter and orca will begin speaking the application. for
example:
terminal tab one
sudo su
password: *******
orca
then orca launches
terminal tab two
sudo su
password: *********
gdmsetup
then gdm starts this is only example you could have launched something
else.
when you want to go back to user just press the ctrl+pgup keys in the
terminal (additional fn for laptops) and press control c and that will
kill orca
rerun orca by pressing alt+f2 and typing orca and you're back to where
you started...
Cody
On Wed, 2007-01-03 at 09:16 -0500, Willie Walker wrote:
I seem to remember from a posting back during last summer that it was
proposed that work should be done on Ubuntu's Admin tools to increase their
accessibility - has this started or been done?
The work to make this happen is on going for GNOME 2.18 and requires
modification to several components. In the meantime, one way around
this issue is to enable the root account, and to allow the root user to
login to gnome. This can be accomplished as follows:
1) Set a password on the root account:
sudo passwd root
2) Next, edit /etc/gdm/gdm.conf-custom and add the following line
under the [security] section:
AllowRoot=true
Reboot your system. Now, log in as root via a text console, and run orca
--setup. You're all done. When you want to administer your system
using GUI administration tools, you can now login to gnome as root and
run orca.
For GNOME 2.18, I hope the situation will be much better.
Hope this helps,
Will
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