Re: [orca-list] Is Linux suitable for non-programmer/computer scientists?
- From: Krishnakant Mane <krmane gmail com>
- To: Julien Claassen <julien mail upb de>
- Cc: "orca-list gnome org" <orca-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] Is Linux suitable for non-programmer/computer scientists?
- Date: Sun, 17 Mar 2013 18:44:42 +0530
Ubuntu 12.04 is good enough.
I have to try sonar yet,but Ubuntu 12.04 is doing perfect for any kind
of use.
The long run solution though might be in sonar like distros because
Ubuntu is not going the right way in terms of accessibility.
Happy hacking.
Krishnakant.
On 03/17/2013 03:48 PM, Julien Claassen wrote:
Hello James!
If you don't want the commandline - or at your own choice as little
as possible - I think Sonar is the choice for you. It's based on
Ubuntu and tailored to work with Orca.
If however you feel, that the commandline - in the long run - might
be better suited - you might have a go at Debian. It does support
BRLTTY during installation and it is rather stable. And it provides a
fair number of very useful commandline utilities. thye commandline
doesn't have to be that complicated. You need to know the names of
your tools to call them up, but there are a lot of them.
Still by all means, start of with Sonar and see, how you like it. A
lot of GUI and Ubuntu itself seems tailored towards the new Linux user.
Warm regards
Julien
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http://juliencoder.de/nama/music.html
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