completed after installing with orca

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Devin Prater 2022-07-06 15:23:25 -05:00 committed by Ankur Sinha (Ankur Sinha Gmail)
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= Getting Started After Installing with Orca
Now that the system is installed, you'll need to log in with your user account
password. But, Orca isn't speaking at this point. To turn it on, press Alt +
Windows + S. The Windows key, from now on, will be called the Super key. This
keyboard command is the usual command for turning on Orca. Orca will say "screen
reader on." Now, enter your password, and press Enter.
Nothing will happen, but you've been logged in. To start Orca here, you'll need
to press Alt + F2, type in "orca" all lowercase, and press Enter. You'll hear
"screen reader on" again. Now, you won't have to turn on Orca again during
logging in, and we'll set Orca to turn up automatically after log in as well.
Now, Mate has an applications menu, which lists all applications in a menu,
sorted into categories. To get to it, press Alt + F1. Now, arrow to the left to
the System menu. Then, arrow down to Preferences, and then right arrow. Now,
arrow down to Personal, right arrow, then arrow down to Assistive Technologies,
and press Enter.
Here, we can set preferred technologies, and turn on and off Assistive
Technologies support. First, let's turn on Assistive Technologies. Press Tab,
and check the box. Now, Shift+Tab back to the preferred applications button, and
press that. In this dialog, tab to the Orca combo box, and one more time to the
Turn on at Startup check box, and press Space to check it. Now, you can close
the dialogs.
Now, let's turn on a few more accessibility options. The text editor on the Mate
desktop is Pluma. Open a Run dialog with Alt + F2, type mate-terminal, which has
a dash between the two words, and press Enter. Now, in the terminal, type
pluma .bash_profile
and press Enter. You'll be in a text area. Press Control + End to go to the
bottom of the file, and add the following lines.
export ACCESSIBILITY_ENABLED=1
export GTK_MODULES=gail:atk-bridge
export GNOME_ACCESSIBILITY=1
export QT_ACCESSIBILITY=1
export QT_LINUX_ACCESSIBILITY_ALWAYS_ON=1
Now, save the file, and close it. Restart the computer, and Orca should come up
automatically, and all apps that are accessible will be accessible.
== Configuring Orca
To configure Orca, press Insert + Space. This will bring up a window with
several tabs. Spend some time configuring Orca, then you can apply the changes
to see how they work, before you close the window. If you want to learn Orca's
keyboard commands, press Insert + H for "help." Then, you can press keys to see
what they do, or press F2 to get a list of global commands, or F3 to get a list
of application-specific commands.
== Other options and notes
To set a keyboard command for turning off and on Orca, go to the Keyboard
Shortcuts preferences under Hardware preferences. You can also set the capslock,
Windows, Alt, and other keys to act as other keys, like having the Capslock as
an additional control. If you close a program, like VLC, and accessibility seems
to freeze, press Insert + H, then F2 to bring up an accessible window. You may
close the screen reader shortcuts afterwards. If Orca becomes unresponsive,
restart it by opening the Run dialog, typing "orca -r", and pressing Enter.