NVDA/EDGE/RSS
Pascal Lambert
Hi All,
I have witnessed a lot of improvements in Edge and I am using it more. I can not figure out how to make use of the RSS for frequent info update on topics of my choosing. I would appreciate any help/suggestions on this. Many thanks. Blessings Pascal
|
|
Re: Tips for speed reading /listening with screen readers
Rob Hudson
Gene <gsasner@ripco.com> wrote:
That's not surprising. I just looked it up and it is a cloud-based system. It's interesting and I'm going to play with the demo. But in fairness to Eloquence, it's like comparing a calculator to a supercomputer.Also, I think there is only one voice for US English in Google TTS. And it is a female voice. With all deference to the lovely females around the world, I prefer to listen to a male voice. Purely for hearing loss issues.
|
|
Re: Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 -
Christo de Klerk
I am using the desktop version of Skype under Windows 10. As you describe, is what I do. But it seems like MS is going to push us to use the Windows 10 Universal Skype app and I need to know if this function is available in it and, if so, how.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Regards Christo
On 2018/07/17 04:18 PM, Joshua Hendrickson wrote:
Yes. With the new version of skype if I call a conference line, I hit
|
|
Re: Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 -
Joshua Hendrickson
Yes. With the new version of skype if I call a conference line, I hit
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
ctrl d to access the dial pad, then just use my numpad keys toe nter in the access code. I am using the desktop version not the app as I have windows7 not windows10.
On 7/17/18, Christo de Klerk <christodeklerk@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello all --
Joshua Hendrickson Joshua Hendrickson
|
|
Re: possible eloquence solution
Damien Garwood <damien@...>
Hi Josh,
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Eloquence? Open-sourced? Owned by Microsoft? You're joking aren't ya? Seriously though. The sad and sorry fact is, Eloquence, like Keynote, is a very old synthesiser indeed. With that in mind, due to its age, and the possibility that they probably designed it for NASA spacecrafts (Well, the price tag would certainly suggest it), companies whose prices and DRM policies are stuck in the 1980's are highly unlikely to jump to the 21st century and say, "Well, nothing's happening, let's just open source it". They'd be more likely to say, "Over my dead body". All that hard work for nothing, eh? As for Microsoft owning it? That's a double whammy. Firstly, unfortunate though the game of life can sometimes be, we have no choice but to face facts. The majority of TTS voices are now leaning towards a more so-called "natural" feel. This includes Microsoft, who have attempted to make all their voices sound natural right from the SAPI4 days. Sapi5 and OneCore are no exception. Personally, I think it makes it sound choppy, and lag like trash. So then, the only other option will be ESpeak which, while portable, responsive and open-source, as far as usability goes, sounds to me like a trip back to hardware synths of the 1960's. Secondly, since Microsoft do a good job of butchering everything that they so much as walk near...No. The idea of Microsoft owning something as quality as Eloquence makes me feel sick. Several potential pages of Microsoft-directed rant suppressed, with great difficulty. Put it this way. If I were any good at self-learning new systems, I would've switched to Windows 10 long ago. As it is, I'm still on 7. And there was me thinking that was too big a change when I was forced to upgrade from XP! Cheers, Damien.
On 17/07/2018 01:10 PM, Josh Kennedy wrote:
It seems like unless this problem is solved it will keep coming up. So I just went into feedback hub and I recommend all of you do the same. I wrote the following feedback to Microsoft.
|
|
Re: Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 -
Christo de Klerk
Hello all
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
I am still using the old Skype program, but if I am going to be pushed to use the Universal Windows Skype app, I need to find out how to go about handling this issue: I sometimes dial into a conferencing service and, once connected, I have to type in an access code. Is it possible in the Skype app to get to a keypad or some way of entering an access code and, if this is possible, how does one do it? I hope someone has figured this out already. Kind regards Christo
On 2018/07/17 01:37 PM, Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io wrote:
Yes its been all over the access areas for a couple of days. I got rid of it a while back. it was just so often knackered by apparently simple updates even in the xp days that I ran out of patience with the Skype writers, and sadly Microsofts record has been no better.
|
|
Re: Tips for speed reading /listening with screen readers
Devin Prater
The one problem with Google TTS, especially in Android and ChromeOS, is that it inflects commas and periods the same, just ing differently. Eloquence handles commas in all kinds of situations, even, you know, like in clauses, like you know, where it inflects perfectly in that case. Apple voices do a good job of this as well. Yes, though, Google's pronouniation, even of uncommon words, like Blazblue, pronounced Blaze Blue, a Japanese video game franchise. But that doesn't change the fact that Google's inflection doesn't take into account different punctuation. --
|
|
Re: Beginning NVDA Developer exam: a prototype version
Howard <howard.lee.harkness@...>
Very interesting collection of questions, Joseph! Thank you for putting this list together. For me, it did a good job of pointing out what I do NOT know about N V D A. I am a programmer by profession, but I have not tackled N V D A development. For somebody like me, where is the best place to start to learn how N V D A is structured? Is there a developer's tutorial?
On Mon, Jul 16, 2018 at 2:48 PM, Joseph Lee <joseph.lee22590@...> wrote:
--
|
|
Re: Tips for speed reading /listening with screen readers
Gene
Whatever you call it, E-Speak introduces
considerable distortion when the speech is speeded up and the distortion starts
at not that fast a speed up. It gets worse as you increase speed.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
From: Sharni-Lee Ward
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 1:26 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Tips for speed reading /listening with screen
readers I don't try to listen at faster speeds than the default. How the hell can you
notice a flutter when the speech is so fast the words run together? On 17/07/2018 4:24 PM, Sociohack AC wrote:
|
|
Re: Tips for speed reading /listening with screen readers
Gene
I also suspect that in the case of Eloquence, high
speed intelligibility is better, perhaps much better, when using American
English instead of Brittish English. I enjoy listening to real Brittish
English. But the Brittish English accent in Eloquence was obviously
created by Americans who have no idea how to properly reproduce a Brittish
accent. It's revolting. Being Americans, they properly reproduced
the American accent.
The American accent is probably clearer at fast
speeds no matter what accent a person is used to because the Brittish accent
degrades the speech itself, it doesn't just change the accent.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
From: Sociohack AC
Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 1:24 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Tips for speed reading /listening with screen
readers I'm so used to E-speak that Eloquence is incoherent to me. But, the flutter you get in E-speak in the boost mode is hindering me to achieve faster speeds. So, I'm forcing myself to get used to Eloquence. And yes, the so called natural sounding synthesizers are not as good at high
speeds. But then, SAPI5 and one core voices aren't much behind if we compare
them to these so called natural voices at moderate voices. I tried a demo of
Acapella, didn't like it much. It's high quality voices do sound good, and more
human like, but you can't use them at high speeds. The speech becomes
incoherent. There is a clatter in the background. When it comes to high
speed functionality, there is nothing better than E[speak and Eloquence.
|
|
Re: possible eloquence solution
Devin Prater
Microsoft would have to buy Nuance, not just CodeFactory. --
|
|
possible eloquence solution
Josh Kennedy
It seems like unless this problem is solved it will keep coming up. So I just went into feedback hub and I recommend all of you do the same. I wrote the following feedback to Microsoft. Please purchase all rites to CodeFactory Nuance Eloquence TTS. Offer it as a free downloadable sapi5 and OneCore voice addons under ease of access in windows10. And on the Microsoft website as sapi5 for windows7 users. Also please maintain the android version so it keeps working and perhaps lower the price to $2 or $3. Nuance CodeFactory licenses are too restrictive. Adding Eloquence to microsoft’s voice portfolio would benefit those with hearing impairments. So if Microsoft owned it, whenever you buy a copy of windows or a new pc, you also pay for the rite to use eloquence on any pc you buy.and if you don’t want it, you just do not go into ease of access and download it. Nuance copyright is stuck back in the 80s and early 90s and has to change. If not, this issue will probably keep cropping up.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
|
|
Re: Jeff's addon repository
Josh Kennedy
If I had the money, I would personally buy the rites to eloquence and then I would open source it. And then this whole legal argument about it could finally stop. Using it is sort of a gray area though. Because well once again, lets say I purchase sapi5 eloquence. And then I also buy jaws which also has eloquence. So legally I can use sapi5 eloquence, and eloquence as long as it is the one tied to jaws and jaws is running. But if I want to use another free eloquence addon made by a 3rd party which may offer features neither jaws eloquence nor sapi5 eloquence offers, I cannot. Because some legal document says so? How am I hurting the developer? I paid for the jaws license, I paid for the eloquence sapi5 license. They got money from me. Why should they really care if I choose to use the illegal addon especially since I legally purchased not one but multiple sapi5 copies and a copy of jaws which includes eloquence? I could even go out and purchase the official codeFactory addon. But if it turns out to not be as good of quality as the illegal addon, I would use the illegal one. It's the same with a vehicle. Heck we have more rites when it comes to buying cars and trucks than we do with software. If I could see, and if i bought a car or truck to drive around and got my driver's license. Lets say well the truck I bought I want to give it a more powerful engine. I could switch out the engine for a different one, convert it to an electric vehicle if i wish, modify the engine to give it more power, etcetera. Remove the tires and replace them with caterpillar tracks... And in a way I could open source my ideas and show others how to do all this through youtube videos. The problem is that copyright law itself has to change. It is still stuck back in the 1980s or early 1990s. There is another way to hurt if you really want to, the eloquence developers and that would be just don't buy it and use OneCore voices. But some people due to hearing or other issues need eloquence or eloquence works best for them due to the specific qualities of its speech. Perhaps, to solve this problem once and for all, since eloquence is quite old anyway, the United States and UK and Australian governments should get together, purchase all of the rites to eloquence, and then hand those rites off to microsoft under the condition that microsoft build eloquence in as a free tts as sapi5 and oneCore eloquence right into windows, and also maintain the android version so it keeps working. I suppose I will go into feedback hub and suggest this for ease-of-access features. To solve the eloquence legality issue, the cost of eloquence should be spread out where whenever you buy a new computer, which also gives you the rite to use windows, you also have the rite to use eloquence as free tts built into windows10 or downloadable from microsoft's website for windows7 and above.
|
|
Re: NVDA vs. Narrator: NVDA still wins.
Brian's Mail list account <bglists@...>
I'm using water fox inwindows 7, its so much faster toopen pages than Firefox.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Brian bglists@blueyonder.co.uk Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@blueyonder.co.uk, putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Steve Nutt" <steve@comproom.co.uk> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 8:48 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] NVDA vs. Narrator: NVDA still wins. Hi, Try Narrator with Chrome. I find firefox is officially awful now. All the best Steve -----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of John Isige Sent: 17 July 2018 02:22 To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] NVDA vs. Narrator: NVDA still wins. So I listened to a very nice podcast about one of the new Narrator features on the Insiders build, the start guide. I fired up Narrator, just to see what it was like. Opened Firefox, and Narrator pretty much wouldn't read or navigate a site, Youtube as it happens. Popped NVDA back on, and it worked just fine. Not to turn this into a Narrator thread, but does Narrator only work, or mostly work, with Microsoft apps? I periodically test Narrator because it's there so why not? Plus Windows is integrating it more, e.g. you can supposedly install 10 from scratch using Narrator, Narrator in safe mode, and so on. I figure that makes it worth getting familiar with if for no other reason than I'll know how to use it when it's the thing I'll need to use. But it's gonna be hard to become familiar with it if it doesn't work with chunks of the stuff I use. Is there a Narrator list or something, like this list basically? I tried looking around for something like "using Microsoft narrator with Firefox", but I just get stuff about using Narrator generally or occasional reviews of using older versions of Narrator. I'm thankful Microsoft is making accessibility a bigger priority and giving us things like installation and safe mode, well I've never really tried either but you know, I'm glad they're there if something comes up. But for me, Narrator's nowhere near NVDA. I know some people have implied that it is, and I'm not trying to make this a fight or anything. So I'm sort of trying to find out, you know does all of this great functionality come from sticking solely to Microsoft's stuff? Because I don't get the hype. I can't imagine using it as my primary screen reader for any length of time. People say it's getting closer to things like NVDA. But for me, I just don't see it. Am I missing something? Because right now I think my dream scenario would be NVDA from power on, or as close as it could be managed.
|
|
Re: NVDA vs. Narrator: NVDA still wins.
Brian's Mail list account <bglists@...>
Yews I noticed this hype from Microsoft. they have started visiting visually impaired charities etc, extolling the virtues of out of the box accessibility in demos, but you are right, they are always using Microsoft software. I guess it makes sense for them to get narrator fast and working with in house stuff before tackling third party things, and of course one of their latest things is similar key sequences to other screenreaders we all know.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Ahem. Brian bglists@blueyonder.co.uk Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@blueyonder.co.uk, putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Isige" <gwynn@tds.net> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 2:21 AM Subject: [nvda] NVDA vs. Narrator: NVDA still wins. So I listened to a very nice podcast about one of the new Narrator features on the Insiders build, the start guide. I fired up Narrator, just to see what it was like. Opened Firefox, and Narrator pretty much wouldn't read or navigate a site, Youtube as it happens. Popped NVDA back on, and it worked just fine.
|
|
Re: Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 -
Brian's Mail list account <bglists@...>
Actually for those who want to try new nvda fixes for any new skype, access to a really bleeding edge snap might once again be an idea for NVAccess to consider. At the moment I see updates but not any that get onto the alpha or beta channels.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Brian bglists@blueyonder.co.uk Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@blueyonder.co.uk, putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Joseph Lee" <joseph.lee22590@gmail.com> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 9:44 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 - Hi, We'll see. Right now, it is too early to talk about what's coming in Skype 14 (the next version of Skype for Windows 10 users), but suffice to say that I'm keeping a very close eye on changes. Cheers, Joseph -----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Shaun Everiss Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 1:43 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 - Well I hope that the end of skype7 sees more access and ease of use put into skype now. On 7/17/2018 8:30 PM, Joseph Lee wrote: Hi,
|
|
Re: Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 -
Joshua Hendrickson
Hi to all. I had to update my skype from version 7 because one day my
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
skype became so slow it wouldn't load properly. The new version of skype really isn't that bad. You have to do a lot of tabbing and shift tabbing to get around, but as long as I can get to who I want to call, that is ok for me. If anyone knows how to add people to a skype call using the new version, I'd appreciate some tips on that. That's one thing I haven't figured out yet. I was surprised how quickly I learned how to use the new skype when people had said on different lists how hard it was to use. I'm using a windows7 64 bit machine and at least for now, things are working fine.
On 7/17/18, Joseph Lee <joseph.lee22590@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi, --
Joshua Hendrickson Joshua Hendrickson
|
|
Re: Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 -
Brian's Mail list account <bglists@...>
Yes its been all over the access areas for a couple of days. I got rid of it a while back. it was just so often knackered by apparently simple updates even in the xp days that I ran out of patience with the Skype writers, and sadly Microsofts record has been no better.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Brian bglists@blueyonder.co.uk Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@blueyonder.co.uk, putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Sarah k Alawami" <marrie12@gmail.com> To: "Nvda List" <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Monday, July 16, 2018 6:28 PM Subject: [nvda] Microsoft is Killing Skype Classic on September 1 - https://www.thurrott.com/cloud/microsoft-consumer-services/skype/163337/microsoft-killing-skype-classic-september-1
|
|
Re: New to list, newbie question, everything new starts here I guess
Brian's Mail list account <bglists@...>
My first multitasking environment was Desqview by Quarterdeck
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Very good multi tasking of dos. Brian bglists@blueyonder.co.uk Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@blueyonder.co.uk, putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Shaun Everiss" <sm.everiss@gmail.com> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2018 1:02 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] New to list, newbie question, everything new starts here I guess To be honest though that would count for me for every upgrade.
|
|
Re: [SUSPECTED SPAM] [nvda] New to list, newbie question, everything new starts here I guess
Brian's Mail list account <bglists@...>
If I were you I'd not go to 8.1, its actually slower than 7 is.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Brian bglists@blueyonder.co.uk Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@blueyonder.co.uk, putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ervin, Glenn" <glenn.ervin@nebraska.gov> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Monday, July 16, 2018 8:59 PM Subject: Re: [SUSPECTED SPAM] [nvda] New to list, newbie question, everything new starts here I guess Personally, I am still using 7, and soon I will purchase a Windows 8 upgrade, and I will wait until the end of Windows 7’s life cycle.
|
|