free terminal emulator for windows - download and install

Octavian Rasnita orasnita at home.ro
Tue May 21 02:02:56 EDT 2002


There is NCSA Telnet. It works fine and I've heard that it is very
accessible with a dos screen reader.
It is available from NCSA FTP site, but I don't know the address.

Teddy,
orasnita at home.ro

----- Original Message -----
From: "Charles Crawford" <ccrawford at acb.org>
To: <speakup at braille.uwo.ca>
Sent: Monday, May 20, 2002 8:45 PM
Subject: Re: free terminal emulator for windows - download and install


Window eyes uses the insert-a for speak all when you are in teraterm.  That
program is not all that good from my experience.  I just wish there were a
good dos telnet program that coudl run from the dos window..

-- Charlie.

At 12:54 PM 5/20/02 -0500, you wrote:
>You mention jaws scripts. Are there window-eyes set files too? Or does it
>work fine without them.
>Greg
>
>
>On Mon, May 20, 2002 at 01:12:56PM -0400, Rich Caloggero wrote:
> > Janina wrote:
> > > > Another option would be a better screen reader for telnet and a
> > > > better telnet client. That would mean a good DOS screen reader
> > > > like asap or Vocal-Eyes, assuming he can actually run DOS on that
> > > > Windows machine. Neither of those is very cheap, though, and
> >
> > I use a free windows terminal emulator called teraterm. I redefine the
jaws
> > function sayNonHighlightedText to read everything appearing on the
screen,
> > as long as its not a menu or in a dialog box (about 7 lines of code. Go
to
> > http://barajas.mit.edu/teraterm/ to get the package. Just unzip it into
a
> > directory somewhere and click on ttermpro.exe for the standard version
or
> > ttssh.exe for the ssh version. Both report the application name is
> > ttermpro.exe, so the jaws scripts will work regardless.
> > The jaws scripts are in ttermpro.zip. Download this file, extract to
your
> > jaws scripts directory, and then either press enter on this script
filename
> > from within windows explorer or press insert+f2 and choose script
manager
> > and open the file from there. Once you have the file, press control+s to
> > save and compile it. Now you should be able to run teraterm and jaws
should
> > speak correctly.
> >
> > The real problem is text editing. I use ex (vi without the full-screen
> > stuff - basically ed ), but only crazy people like me probably want to
go
> > this way. I need to try a full screen editor and make it work via a
> terminal
> > emulator. VI might be a good choice, but the key bindings only make
> sense if
> > you know about ed. What's the other choices for full screen editing
which
> > are *not* emacs? I've heard of something called vim (is this correct)?
> > There's pico and probably others. I need to try and make this work for
> > myself too, because using ex is nice in some ways, but its more typing
than
> > I really want to do with my RSI the way it is.
> >
> > I can help more with this if needed. Its not the greatest solution, but
it
> > works very well for me. The terminal emulator is very very stable. Its
> > worked on every version of windows I've tried it on with the same
results.
> >
> > Hope this helps someone -- Teddy especially. Please don't hesitate to
> ask me
> > for more help. I will be unavailable for the next week or so, but after
the
> > 28th, I'll be able to answer e-mail again.
> >
> >                     Rich Caloggero
> >                     MIT Adaptive Tech. for Info and Computing
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Speakup mailing list
> > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca
> > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup
>
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