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Getting Sound in Windows 10 Safe Mode
Hello All,
Mission has been accomplished, but I am trying to get one or two additional pieces of information regarding ownership of the registry key in question before writing up the instructions. The process involves manually editing the registry with regard to changing the ownership of the key (and there's only one) involved and granting full access to your Administrators group to it before running a 2-line registry edit script that deletes the existing key then reinserts it with the necessary value to allow sound in Safe Mode. Do I need to write up step-by-step instructions for regedit (and, if so, might someone know of an existing tutorial that I can use as a baseline rather than reinventing the wheel for that part)? I'd rather refer folks to an existing tutorial if there's a good one on using regedit with a screen reader than having to write anything at all, but I will if I must. -- Brian - Windows 10 Home, 64-Bit, Version 1809, Build 17763 A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep. ~ Saul Bellow, To Jerusalem and Back
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Also, though I know this topic is a spin-off on getting NVDA working in Safe Mode, its focus is really specific to Windows 10. I have a dedicated topic, under the same name:
Getting Sound in Windows 10 Safe Mode on the Windows 10 for Screen Reader Users Group, which can be read by anyone, and all ongoing information and discussion will be conducted on that topic. -- Brian - Windows 10 Home, 64-Bit, Version 1809, Build 17763 A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep. ~ Saul Bellow, To Jerusalem and Back
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Brian's Mail list account
I must have missed a bit in this discussion as I know in 7 if you are the admin you can in fact merge the keys to change. You get a warning and then its done, a reboot then sets it to be permanent.
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I do not think we would encourage on here anyone explaining how to hack it if you are not the person who the machine is logged on as so to speak, though I've no doubt it could all be scripted to do it running from a safe mode copy of windows not locked to a user. Brian bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal E-mail to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field. ----- Original Message -----
From: "Brian Vogel" <britechguy@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Tuesday, February 05, 2019 4:29 PM Subject: [nvda] Getting Sound in Windows 10 Safe Mode Hello All, Mission has been accomplished, but I am trying to get one or two additional pieces of information regarding ownership of the registry key in question before writing up the instructions. The process involves manually editing the registry with regard to changing the ownership of the key (and there's only one) involved and granting full access to your Administrators group to it before running a 2-line registry edit script that deletes the existing key then reinserts it with the necessary value to allow sound in Safe Mode. Do I need to write up step-by-step instructions for regedit (and, if so, might someone know of an existing tutorial that I can use as a baseline rather than reinventing the wheel for that part)? I'd rather refer folks to an existing tutorial if there's a good one on using regedit with a screen reader than having to write anything at all, but I will if I must. -- Brian *-* Windows 10 Home, 64-Bit, Version 1809, Build 17763 *A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep.* ~ Saul Bellow, To Jerusalem and Back |
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Raha Tehrani
Hi. so, there's a reg file how should you put it into registry in
windows 10? there's an error message as you press enter on it. and if you right-nandclick on it there will be no run as administrator. so what's the solution? take care. On 2/5/19, Brian's Mail list account via Groups.Io <bglists@...> wrote: I must have missed a bit in this discussion as I know in 7 if you are the |
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Solution posted, as promised, on the Windows 10 For Screen Reader User's Group: https://win10.groups.io/g/win10/message/31592
-- Brian - Windows 10 Home, 64-Bit, Version 1809, Build 17763 A great deal of intelligence can be invested in ignorance when the need for illusion is deep. ~ Saul Bellow, To Jerusalem and Back
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