Re: how to switch speech language
Ali Colak
If you commonly switch between two languages and want to this on the
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fly instead of going through the voices dialogue, then Fawaz Abdul rahman's suggestion is the best option. 1: press nvda+control+p to go to the configurations profiles menu. 2: Tab until you get the new button. 3: Name it whatever you wish, ideally a discriptive name. 4: Press tab to check the manual activation radio button. 5: Press OK. 6: Close the menue. 7: Switch to whatever language you want in the profile through control+nvda+v, then save that configuration with control+nvda+c. 8: Go the nvda preferences menu, then input gestures. 9: Down arrow until you see Configuration profiles and right arrow to expand. 10: Down arrow until you hear the name of the profile you created, than tab until you hear add and press enter or the space bar. 11: Press the key combination you want to associate with that profile, ideal a combination that isn't already associated with something. 12: A context menue will appear asking you which keyboard leyout you want the combination associated with, select whichever you wish, --I advise all keyboard layouts-- then press enter. 13: tab until you hear OK and press enter. 14: Press the key combination to activate and deactivate the profile, which will switch you the language you associated with the account and back.
On 8/4/21, Jujube <ellaxyu@...> wrote:
I believe the command to access the voice dialog is control nvda V.
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Nimer Jaber
Right, and the question has now been answered, so topic is locked. Thanks everyone.
On Wed, Aug 4, 2021 at 10:31 PM Shaun Everiss <sm.everiss@...> wrote:
--
Best, Nimer Jaber The message above is intended for the recipient to whom it was addressed. If you believe that you are not the intended recipient, please notify me via reply email and destroy all copies of this correspondence. Action taken as a result of this email or its contents by anyone other than the intended recipient(s) may result in civil or criminal charges. I have checked this email and all corresponding attachments for security threats. Registered Linux User 529141. http://counter.li.org/ To find out about a free, open-source, and versatile screen reader for Windows, visit nvaccess.org You can follow @nimerjaber on Twitter for the latest technology news. To contact me, you can reply to this email or you may call me at (970) (393-4481) and I will do my best to respond to you promptly. Thank you, and have a great day!
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Well having both both are fine. Amd do get regular non whql drivers so you do get the latest so there is more chance for your version being compatible with the latest version of windows however at the same time you can bump into a version not compatible and causing issues but probably good if you are an insider maybe its certainly faster. Not that intels are bad or anything. After spectre amd seemed to be the more secure but at least right now its hard to get a nonbranded unlocked amd system and mostly its intel in local stores anyway. On the other side, unless you use an old a class generation or gen1 ryzen microsoft is more leniant towards amd as an upgrade path. My at least 4 or now 5 year old amd 2nd ryzen will make the upgrade path while all intel units below 8th gen will not so an amd system does have the advantage. Also while intel has tpm amd at least mine has in conjunction to tpm their own security module called sp10 and also has an actual processer devoted to security so there's that.
On 5/08/2021 2:51 pm, Gene wrote:
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Monte Single
Hi Pranav
The first p c I purchased almost 25 years ago had an a m d processor. Currently, I am using a 5 year old h p desktop with a 6th gen I core 5 processor.
I can never afford the latest, and greatest, but currently, from what I hear from various sources, the a m d Rizon processors are a better choice in terms of performance and price.
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Pranav Lal
Sent: August 4, 2021 9:53 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Hi all,
Many thanks for confirming. I am still shopping around so lets see what is available here and what I can get. Good to know I have options.
Pranav
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Vaibhav Saraf
Hi Pranav, I have two machines, one with Intel and one with AMD. NVDA works smoothly on both. Thanks, Vaibhav
On Thu, 5 Aug 2021 at 09:23, Pranav Lal <pranav@...> wrote:
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Hi all,
Many thanks for confirming. I am still shopping around so lets see what is available here and what I can get. Good to know I have options.
Pranav
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Re: How should I read the parameter information of each method in Visual Studio?
Rowen Cary
I suspect this is a bug of NVDA, I may need to create an issue.
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Gene
I just checked. this is about an eleven year old Windows 7 laptop in
what was then a moderate price range, about $500. The processor is a
2.51GHZ unit. The minimum requirement for JAWS is a 1.5GHZ
processor. .
Gene
From: Gene
Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2021 9:40 PM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Intel or AMD: does the processor make a
difference to NVDA I hope techs comment on this, agreeing or not. Screen-readers aren’t
resource hogs and they don’t require fast processors. My understanding is
that if a computer runs well in general, it will run well with a
screen-reader.
However, the newer synthesizers that require more resources and aren’t as
responsive as the older ones may require discussion. My impression is that
people generally use the newer less responsive synthesizers for listening to
documents and they use older responsive synthesizers such as Eloquence for
work.
Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Arlene
Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2021 9:25 PM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Intel or AMD: does the processor make a
difference to NVDA Hi, I am not sure if I’m a good help. I know with Jaws you need a faster processor I could be lying. Not sure about NVDA. I know Jaws is a resource hog. I’m not sure anymore. It depends on what you are going to do with your computer. If you are going to do radio shows using a computer. Yu do need a fast processor. If you are going to play games or record shows then you may need a faster computer.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Pranav
Lal
Hi all,
I am planning to upgrade my desktop. Do CPU brands make a difference to how well a screen reader runs? Will NVDA work as well with an intel CPU as with a AMD CPU?
I suspect it does not but prefer checking.
Pranav
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Gene
I hope techs comment on this, agreeing or not. Screen-readers aren’t
resource hogs and they don’t require fast processors. My understanding is
that if a computer runs well in general, it will run well with a
screen-reader.
However, the newer synthesizers that require more resources and aren’t as
responsive as the older ones may require discussion. My impression is that
people generally use the newer less responsive synthesizers for listening to
documents and they use older responsive synthesizers such as Eloquence for
work.
Gene
-----Original Message-----
From: Arlene
Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2021 9:25 PM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Intel or AMD: does the processor make a
difference to NVDA Hi, I am not sure if I’m a good help. I know with Jaws you need a faster processor I could be lying. Not sure about NVDA. I know Jaws is a resource hog. I’m not sure anymore. It depends on what you are going to do with your computer. If you are going to do radio shows using a computer. Yu do need a fast processor. If you are going to play games or record shows then you may need a faster computer.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Pranav
Lal
Hi all,
I am planning to upgrade my desktop. Do CPU brands make a difference to how well a screen reader runs? Will NVDA work as well with an intel CPU as with a AMD CPU?
I suspect it does not but prefer checking.
Pranav
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locked
Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Arlene
Hi, I am not sure if I’m a good help. I know with Jaws you need a faster processor I could be lying. Not sure about NVDA. I know Jaws is a resource hog. I’m not sure anymore. It depends on what you are going to do with your computer. If you are going to do radio shows using a computer. Yu do need a fast processor. If you are going to play games or record shows then you may need a faster computer.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Pranav Lal
Sent: August 4, 2021 5:02 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Hi all,
I am planning to upgrade my desktop. Do CPU brands make a difference to how well a screen reader runs? Will NVDA work as well with an intel CPU as with a AMD CPU?
I suspect it does not but prefer checking.
Pranav
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locked
Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
And I'll be a third. I've never noticed any difference in how either NVDA or JAWS runs on Intel versus AMD processors.
-- Brian - Windows 10, 64-Bit, Version 21H1, Build 19043 Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity. ~Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Tyler Wood
Hi, Not in the slightest. Go with whatever you fancy and you'll be happy, at this point. I own a 1st generation Ryzen (1800x) and various Intel processors. I see no difference at all both in response time and more importantly to me, browsing windows explorer, which used to be a huge problem with NVDA. hope that helps and best of luck with your decision.
On Wed, Aug 4, 2021 at 7:02 PM Pranav Lal <pranav@...> wrote: Hi all,
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Re: Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
JM Casey
I have run screen-readers on both Intel and AMDs (I have an AMD right now)
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and not n noticed any difference in behaviour or performnace. I feel like it would be quite strange if there was a difference, but maybe someone with more nowledge of Cpu hardware can clarify how this might in fact be a thing.
-----Original Message-----
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Pranav Lal Sent: August 4, 2021 08:02 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA Hi all, I am planning to upgrade my desktop. Do CPU brands make a difference to how well a screen reader runs? Will NVDA work as well with an intel CPU as with a AMD CPU? I suspect it does not but prefer checking. Pranav
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Intel or AMD: does the processor make a difference to NVDA
Hi all,
I am planning to upgrade my desktop. Do CPU brands make a difference to how well a screen reader runs? Will NVDA work as well with an intel CPU as with a AMD CPU? I suspect it does not but prefer checking. Pranav
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Re: Vocalizer Compact Voices for NVDA
Rui Fontes
Vocalizer for NVDA from Tiflotecnia allows the use of compact voices...
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Rui Fontes Tiflotecnia, Lda. Às 18:10 de 04/08/2021, Daniel McGee escreveu:
Hello everyone
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Re: Problem with NVDA Verbosity using MS Outlook
Luke
Hello, I’m a little late here, but if you want a keyboard shortcut to make Outlook work faster and not deal with all that nonsense, this is what I do., Press NVDA+ n to bring up NVDA menu, hit right arrow on preferences and arrow down to input gestures, arrow down to document formatting or press D for first letter navigation, then arrow right to expand, then arrow down to until you hear toggles on the reporting of tables and arrow right to expand. Then Make your input gesture for the keyboard shortcut. So next time you are in Outlook and are in a message and NVDA is giving all that verbosity and slowing things down, press the keyboard combination you made as a input gesture. If you want reporting of tables back on, press the keyboard combination again. Good luck! By the way I am using Outlook 365.
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of Rena
Sent: July 28, 2021 1:43 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Problem with NVDA Verbosity using MS Outlook
Hello,
I’m new here, and I have a problem and a question, please.
Rena
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Re: Does the colour or font size of text in an image matter when performingOCR
Short answer, contrast between lettering and background is the most important factor unless you have really small print. Color, not so much.
-- Brian - Windows 10, 64-Bit, Version 21H1, Build 19043 Nothing in all the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity. ~Martin Luther King, Jr.
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Re: audio themes add-on? any plans?
Kevin Cussick
Hi, OK as requested off list please. kevin.cussick@... will do it.
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On 03/08/2021 23:53, Curtis Delzer wrote:
most certainly!!
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Re: Open a link in ui.browseableMessage()?
Rui Fontes
Hello!
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Using some of my add-ons code: _NRIniFile = os.path.join(globalVars.appArgs.configPath, "NVDARecord.html") message = u"<h1>{title}</h1><br>".format(title=_("List of commands for running add-ons")) for addon in sorted(addonDic, key = lambda item: item.lower()): message += u"<h2>{addonSum}</h2>\n<table>\n<tr><th>".format(addonSum=addon) #. Translators: The title of the column containing the documentation of each of the scripts. message += _("Documentation") message += "</th><th>" #. Translators: The title of the column containing the command of each of the scripts. message += _("Gesture") message += "</th></tr>\n" script = addonDic[addon]) for gesture in sorted(script): message += u"<tr><td>{doc}</td><td>{gesture}</td></tr>\n".format (doc = script[gesture], gesture=gesture) with open(_NRIniFile, "w", encoding = "utf-8") as file: file.write(message) # Opens the help of our addon on default browser. webbrowser.open(item.getDocFilePath()) I didn't check rigorously the identation... And I didn't check the result, but theorically, it should result... Rui Fontes Às 18:20 de 04/08/2021, anthony borg escreveu:
Hi rui
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Re: Does the colour or font size of text in an image matter when performingOCR
Vaibhav Saraf
Hi, Well this is something I have observed personally. Often on images when I perform OCR, it would ignore some text which it would catch when I zoom into the picture and then perform OCR. And if I am not wrong color contrast too has a role to some extent, experts may have a better view. Thanks, Vaibhav
On Wed, 4 Aug 2021 at 22:24, Khalid Anwar <anwarkhalid850@...> wrote:
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