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Date: | Thu, 3 Jul 2003 11:12:26 -0700 |
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Hi Chris,
Oh, Digitalk does a pretty good job of accessing streams in digital modes.
Last night I tuned the radio to 14.070 and copied several conversations.
The biggest problem I found is that I can't shut up the computer voice
through the sound card even though I am running JFW through a Doubletalk PC.
I can't seem to find the switch in Digitalk to do this.
Thanks and I look forward to more talk on this one. Very 73.
Kevin, K7RX
Kevin Nathan, Independent Living Coordinator
Dept. of Services for the Blind
3411 S. Alaska
Seattle, Wa 98118
Voice: (206) 721-6450
Cell: (206) 604-4767
Toll Free: (800) 552-7103
Fax: (206) 721-6403
Email: [log in to unmask]
-----Original Message-----
From: Christopher Moore [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2003 11:03 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Digitalk Questions
Bob/Kevin,
Using the soundcard for both speech and digital work can pose interesting
problems, especially when transmitting. When you're transmitting you need
to ednsure that your screen reader won't start chattering at the same time
as you are sending a digital signal. In this event, you'd be broadcasting
eloquence for the whole world to hear. The safest approach would be to run
your screen reader through an external synth or have multiple soundcards in
your computer.
The com port is typically used to toggle the radio into transmit mode using
the ptt line. Here again, if you're using jaws over the soundcard, yuou
definitely wouldn't want to use vox because this would send your rig into
transmit mode every time jaws said something.
I'll be interested in hearing how the accessible the program is.
Typically, digital software relies heavily on the use of onscreen tuning
aids for selecting signals to decode. Perhaps digitalk has developed a
blind-friendly approach for this. If so, it would be a major breakthrough
for us.
73
Chris w1gm
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