Caveat: Depending on if alt+super+S is bound.
I can name several distros that leave that unbound by default, hence why I sugested setting a shortcut to do orca --replace so you know that's set
As for Seamonkey...I'm wondering if you can't just install or
extract Seamonkey and go into the script and change the lines that
are (ror example) exec /usr/bin/firefox to
/home/user/seamonkey/seamonkey for example, or is the script set
up to specifically look for firefox? I'm wondering if you can just
replace the path to FF with the path to seamonkey, but I don't
have your script to look over to see how it's put togetherreplace
Orca does have a command, similar to triple clicking the home or side buttons, or Mac os’s command plus f5. It is alt plus super plus S. Super, is the Windows key. Pressing altsuper S, will usually get things going again speech wise. It would be awesome, to see something such as Siri on Google assistant developed for Linux.
JAWS Certified, 2021, https://www.freedomscientific.com/Training/Certification
On Dec 22, 2021, at 9:45 AM, Devin Prater via orca-list <orca-list gnome org> wrote:
Ah, whenever Orca stops talking, immediately press Alt + Control + D for the desktop. If that doesn't work, press Insert + h, then F1 or F2, then you'll have an extra window, but stuff should work again.
_______________________________________________On Wed, Dec 22, 2021 at 5:29 AM Reece O'Bryan via orca-list <orca-list gnome org> wrote:
I tried to think of the nicest way to ask this without offending anyone on this list, but I can’t think of a way to ask my questions without either being unclear or slightly offensive, so here goes..._______________________________________________
Why is it that VoiceOver seems to work so much better than orca? I ask from a position of pure ignorance… is it as simple as Apple having $1 T and not wanting an ADA lawsuit while Orca is a free project done by amazing volunteers? Is VoiceOver somehow integrated into Mac OS and Orca is working with further distance from the Linux kernel?
My biggest problem with orca is that I somehow repeatedly make my system kill speech by doing very small things. If this happened with Mac OS and voiceover, then I can simply tell Siri to turn voiceover off and back on. With orca it seems as if when you kill speech, then you literally have killed it and it takes dramatic steps such as a restore or reinstall to fix it. Wouldn’t it be easier to have a secondary, potentially even optional, process running in the background that only checks to see that speech is working with Orca and Wood restart Orca if it crashes?
Maybe this is incorrect thinking. Is the problem that orca is running at or like software on the operating system instead of being a part of it like with macOS? Meaning an OS process should perform the check and fix of speech.
Thank you,
-Reece O’BryanC: (502)-827-37241645 Parkway, Sevierville, TN 37862
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_______________________________________________ orca-list mailing list orca-list gnome org https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/orca-list Orca wiki: https://wiki.gnome.org/Projects/Orca Orca documentation: https://help.gnome.org/users/orca/stable/ GNOME Universal Access guide: https://help.gnome.org/users/gnome-help/stable/a11y.html