Slack 13.37 and 14.0
Mitchell D. Lynn
mlynn at kc.rr.com
Tue May 14 10:03:38 EDT 2013
Thanks for the response.
My rate change blues are post-install for Debian and while the Speakup keys
announce incremental rate changes, they don't actually change the rate. It
stays at 180 something . I'd have to go check to see. Now, if memory serves
me, the rate does change in the rate file for the synth. Changes in the rate
file have no affect on the rate whatsoever. I don't think it is a keyboard
issue because I have tried multiple keyboards: one was a PS2 connector and
the other two were USB. Same result with all, and all seem to work fine on
other systems. I will give 64-bit Wheezy a shot.
RE The Slackware Issue
According to the Slackware docs on the DVD, those issues were back with
version 12.x FWIW, Slack 14 uses 3.2.29 kernel.
-----Original Message-----
From: Speakup [mailto:speakup-bounces at linux-speakup.org] On Behalf Of Tony
Baechler
Sent: Tuesday, May 14, 2013 4:10 AM
To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.
Subject: Re: Slack 13.37 and 14.0
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA256
Since no one answered, I'll try my luck. I don't use Slackware and haven't
in a very long time. If you're using hardware speech, Slack probably ships
a newer kernel after 2.6.37 with broken serial support.
The only two options are to use an older kernel or software speech. I don't
think Slackware supports software speech, but Debian does. If you're
running 32-bit, you might run into problems with big drives regardless of
the kernel. I would recommend installing 64-bit Debian Squeeze if your
system can run 64-bit and upgrade to Wheezy from there.
That still lets you use the older kernel with hardware speech while giving
you the newer packages. If you can use software speech, of course just
installing Debian Wheezy directly is the better option. I've ran both
Debian Squeeze with the 2.6.32 kernel and Wheezy with the 3.2 kernel and
several 3 TB drives in a RAID array with no problems. As I'm sure you know,
you probably don't want to use a 3 TB drive for boot. I have a separate 1
TB RAID array for my boot drive and I've had no problems.
In reading your message again, I have a question. What happens with Debian
if you use the standard Speakup keys to change your rate and pitch?
I use a DECtalk Express here and I've never had that problem. In fact, I
worked on fixing the driver and William incorporated my fixes with his own
into the official Speakup module, so you should have a very good experience.
Someone else has reported random rate and pitch drops, but he's using a
DECtalk USB. I'm assuming you tried either the speakupconf script in the
speakup-tools package or added lines to /etc/rc.local to set your rate and
pitch, right? If the standard Speakup keys aren't working, you might have a
keyboard issue or there might be a bug in D-I. Did you actually get Debian
installed or is the problem you're having with the install CD?
On 5/13/2013 10:06 AM, Mitchell D. Lynn wrote:
> New to this list and hoping you all can help with this problem. I am
> having issues with the last two versions of Slackware and getting
> Speakup at install time. I have used Slackware back to version 7.0
> with no issues.
>
> For some reason, I can't get Speakup to load on either of these
> releases. Using DEC Talk Express. Tried speakup.s, huge.s and
> hugesmp.s since the latter two appear to have Speakup as well.
>
> I desperately need to get to a version that supports 3TB hard drives.
> Considered switching to Debian, but ran into a Speakup issue there
> too. Seems to be stuck at a default rate, and it won't let me change
> it for session or otherwise.
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