** Tags added: oem-priority
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop Orca
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I had the most nightmarish experience yet: Somehow (probably by
accidentally typing the shortcut) I turned on Orca, but because my
computer's sound was muted, I only got mysterious symptoms. PDF files in
Firefox kept returning to the first page, TeXstudio would crash with a
segmentation fault when
Still a bug in 19.04. Accidentally triggered the screen reader,
absolutely no way to kill it in an obvious manner. I had to google for
what the screen reader is on Ubuntu to start with. No icons, no
warnings, nothing at all. In the end got rid of it by killing and
permanently removing it. Good ridd
Behavior still exists... `killall orca; apt remove gnome-orca` was my
approach. Would've kept it installed if there was some way to stop it
without resorting to killall.
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Unable to turn off the Orca screen reader on login screen, tried editing
the .desktop file from etc and disabling it from settings, but it wakes
up every time on login screen. Text pronounced are "Turning screen
reader off, turning screen reader on ..." and it goes on.
Please fix this, for now i a
ubuntu 14.04 TT ...shes not close and need pitch control
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop Orca
To manage notifications about this bug g
good diction and agreement in scores but still do not know rewrite the text.
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop Orca
To manage notificati
Me toovery painful experience...going to attempt logout as
fiddling with "universal access" was useless.Keeping my fingers
crossed
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I am running Ubuntu GNOME 15.04, and all I am able to do to stop it is
to kill its process, but it carries on talking even after it is dead!
That is, it finishes its sentence in protest... But some way of exiting
it other than that would be nice...
** Summary changed:
- There is no apparent way t
I am running Fedora 20 with Cinnamon.
Only way I have found to stop Orca is
killall orca
in terminal
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop O
Marking this one as invalid, we will track this one instead:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/oem-priority/+bug/1361139
** Changed in: oem-priority
Status: Incomplete => Invalid
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https:/
** Changed in: oem-priority
Status: New => Incomplete
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop Orca.
To manage notifications about this b
** Also affects: oem-priority
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop Orca.
To manage notifications
Linking back to the commentary on Ask Ubuntu:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/278693/how-do-i-stop-orca-screen-
reader
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Title:
There is no ap
Hello,
This problem still exists in 14.04.
Alt+Super+S shortcut as suggested by Vladimir Rutsky works.
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Title:
There is no apparent way to sto
very stupid program does not help anything.
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Title:
There is no apparent way to stop Orca.
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https:
Behaviour still exists. Ubuntu 13.10 all updates installed.
To add to what Vladimir Rutsky has said, you may need to first turn the
reader on, before turning it off. So it is already reading, but you
first press Alt+Super+S to start it (again?) and then again to turn it
finally off.
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I can confirm this bug in Ubuntu 13.10.
As workaround I found that you can turn off screen reader in System
Settings -> Universal Access -> Seeing -> Screen Reader (Alt+Super+S).
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As workaround I found that you can turn off screen reader in System
Settings -> Universal Access -> Seeing -> Screen Reader (Alt+Super+S).
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Title:
Status changed to 'Confirmed' because the bug affects multiple users.
** Changed in: gnome-orca (Ubuntu)
Status: New => Confirmed
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