You can just use the dmesg command in a terminal. I also see the regular loss of speech with espeak. I have never been able to track down the issue, though I tend to get distracted with other things when I try. I don't see this crashing with speechd or with espeak and speech-dispatcher generally. It is limited to the emacspeak espeak interface. I find disabling character echo can help a bit. Otherwise, I've just gotten use to hitting C-e C-s to restart espeak when it stops responding. I have noticed that I don't see this issue with the experiments I've done that don't use tcl as the interface language. So it could be that the problem is in the tcl layer, but this is just more guesswork. Tim On Fri, 2013-05-10 at 11:50 +1000, Jason White wrote: > Christopher Chaltain <chaltain@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > I don't see this file on this system. It's a Ubuntu based system. > > Ubuntu keeps diverging from every other Linux distribution in a growing > variety of ways. > > Try /var/log/syslog. I don't have an Ubuntu-based system so I'm guessing here. > > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or change your address on the > emacspeak list send mail to "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with a > subject of "unsubscribe" or "help". > ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or change your address on the emacspeak list send mail to "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with a subject of "unsubscribe" or "help".
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