Hi Ryan, To answer some of your questions, I will quote them inline: On Sun, Feb 6, 2022 at 07:43 Ryan Mann via Emacspeak <emacspeak(a)emacspeak.org> wrote: > Hello. Please excuse my ignorance about Emacspeak. I have a > few basic questions. > 1. For those who use Emacspeak, what benefits do you get over > using > other screen readers like Speakup or Fenrir with Emacs? The other screen-readers can work for all the applications, including to some extent Emacs. However, Emacspeak only works in Emacs. Its advantage is that it only voices the interface of Emacs in a way other screen-readers cannot do. Certainly, it has got some setbacks, but you can hack your way through Lisp code. I personally do not like its lack of continuous reading with movement of the point, but then this is a subject for another day. I normally use Fenrir as my primary screen-reader outside Emacs. > 2. From what I understand, Emacspeak can be used for things like > web > browsing and email. Is this the case? If so, how is that > accomplished? > Are these things built into Emacspeak or are there addons for > Emacs > that need to be downloaded? True, you can browse within Emacs using its built in browser. You can browse most sites without issues. It uses w3m as its browser. As for email, you can install a number of packages from Elpa as your clients. As for me, since 2018, I had been hooked to mu4e which is my primary email client. I do not have even Thunderbird on my machine as all my mail is done within Emacs. Other clients include gnus, notmuch, wanderlust --- but I never tried them. Outside Emacs, I sometimes use Mutt. But then this is a matter of choice. My primary browsing though is not in Emacs, and for that I use Firefox. I only browse within Emacs when I have to click links of certain articles that I may need to save on disk. As for the next question, > 3. If web browsing can be done with Emacs and Emacspeak, are you > limited to text based web sites like you are with other text > based > browsers such as Lynx or can you access the same web sites you > can > with graphical browsers such as Chrome and Firefox? Most text-based sites can be browsed, but I came across certain sites where I got message about browser not being supported. I think others will also provide their own experiences. Cheers, Ishe > > > Sent from my iPhone > _______________________________________________ > Emacspeak mailing list -- emacspeak(a)emacspeak.org > To unsubscribe send an email to emacspeak-leave(a)emacspeak.org -- Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws. - Plato (427-347 B.C.)
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