Re: [orca-list] Speech Dispatcher on Ubuntu 8.10 with Alsa?
- From: Tomas Cerha <cerha brailcom org>
- To: Anthony Sales <tony sales rncb ac uk>
- Cc: speechd lists freebsoft org, orca-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] Speech Dispatcher on Ubuntu 8.10 with Alsa?
- Date: Mon, 12 Jan 2009 10:30:05 +0100
Anthony Sales wrote:
For Christmas I would like a step by step guide to getting Speech-Dispatcher
working with Alsa on Ubuntu 8.10 with multi-channel sound support.
Hello Anthony,
I just booted Vinux 1.2 CD on my notebook with Intel HDA soundcard and I
was able to get Orca speaking through Speech Dispatcher over ALSA with
totem playing an mp3 at the same time.
What I did:
sudo apt-get install speech-dispatcher python-speechd
sudo gedit /etc/defaults/speech-dispatcher (overwrite 'no' to 'yes')
sudo apt-get remove pulseaudio
Then disabled PulseAudio in System/Preferences/Sessions,
set everything to ALSA in System/Preferences/Sound/Devices
and disabled all sound effects in System/Preferences/Sound/Sounds
The last is probably not necessary, but it caused ESD to block the sound
device. I believe there is a way to force ESD to use ALSA as well to be
able to have system souns, but this is another story...
Then I restarted the Gnome session. I had a problem in session startup,
since the session still tried to start pulseaudio-session, which was not
there anymore. I guess it is possible to get around this by
uninstalling some other components, such as pulseaudio-module-*.
Anyway, I started a failsafe session and I was able to start Speech
Dispatcher:
sudo /etc/init.d/speech-dispatcher start
spd-say hello
I heard Hello from Espeak. Orca preferences had the Speech Dispatcher
option (in Speech System!!!), so I switched to espeak over SD and chose
English. Then I ran totem and started an mp3 playback. Orca was still
speaking while the mp3 was playing.
Best regards, Tomas
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