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Re: installing brlspeak.
- From: <cbowman netdoor com>
- To: <blinux-list redhat com>
- Subject: Re: installing brlspeak.
- Date: Sun, 10 Mar 2002 22:48:00 -0600
hi, well, what I would like to do is that i am getting a new computer and it
will have removeable hardrives and so I have 1 60 gb hard drive that dosn't
have an os on it at all so was thinking of using it for linux if posable.
or, do i need to have another os on there to work with linux?
charles
On 2002-03-08 blinux-list redhat com said:
>"Joel Zimba" <jzimba erols com> writes:
>> My thought is this. Assume there's such a thing as a generic
>>computer out there... which there is starting to be:
>> some kind-o-pentium with a processor from severa vendors (yes yes,
>>I know pentium means intel, but linux isn't that picky)
>> if we assume a generically huge hard disk and of course a sound
>>card, how complex would the cm be to come up with a distribution
>>or just a bootable cd (problem in itself) that would at least
>talk out of the box... I once did a bootable live CD with tmpfs and
>brltty. WOrked quite well. DId that using the nice debian system.
>Basicly, you just use debootstrap to make a chroot
>system, chroot into it, and set it up until all the
>packages you like/need are there, and the config is right.
>Then you check the size again, maybe add/remove something,
>and make a bootable image out of it using mkisofs.
>That worked, and was basicly work of about 5 hours.
>The more problematic areas are:
>Repartitioning,
>hardware detection.
>1. Repartitioning is what most users who switch
>need. Nearly no one buys a extra computer for Linux
>experiments these days, and a second hard disk
>isnt always availablle too.
>Hardware detection: You talked about soundcards, yeah. For most
>of them, including all drivers in the kernel on the CD
>works fine, some others need tweaking which isnt simple
>if the thing is on a CD.
>Also, it would be nice to have a simple braille driver
>detection program, separate from all those different
>screen readers. That prog should just scan ttyS0-3 and probably
>even the USB bus for a braille display and return an identification
>strhing. This that tool, one could build a nice
>autodetecting braille driver start script.
>Same applies for voice synths of course...
>> recorded .wavs would be less desirable then tts, but might do in
>>a pinch... at least enough to bootstrap someone... preferably
>>without having to own various kinds of somewhat compatible
>assistive technology products. Yeah, the idea of a soundcard as
>synth is good. But we shouldn't forget about people actually having
>some asssistive technologies hardware.
>> It woulden't even have to be a full system, but it must easily
>>migrate to a full installation.
>I can only say, debian! Didnt find any other distro
>which has such a nice upgrade process.
>> I'm thinking maximize stability and do our best to keep the change
>> monsters from getting out of control.
>Reading that sentence, its probably better to try
>to work at debian boot-floppies for a voice install?
>Then, we could integrate that effort into debian itself very easily,
>and wouldnt need to care about maintaining the other packages
>(keeping them up-to-date...)
>> just imagine a free or inexpensive cd shoved into a dirt cheap
>>computer ($50 for a reasonably powerful machine these days) and
>>bang, net access... and alll the gnu software you could want.
>As I said, a live bootable CD is easy.
>Just try it yourself.
>--
>CYa,
>Mario
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>Blinux-list redhat com
>https://listman.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list
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