|
Home | Switchboard | Unix Administration | Red Hat | TCP/IP Networks | Neoliberalism | Toxic Managers |
(slightly skeptical) Educational society promoting "Back to basics" movement against IT overcomplexity and bastardization of classic Unix |
Many magazines and book publishers make available a free online version of their products, often as PDF files. Chances are you scroll through multiple pages of PDFs every day. To reduce the number of miles you put on the mouse wheel, you can use free software to read out the documents to you.
Adobe Acrobat Reader has built-in accessibility support for reading out PDFs.
The current version 7 can be installed under Linux. If you don't already have the
reader, navigate to the product's
download
section and choose between an .rpm file (41.9 MB) and a tarball (42.1 MB). Installing
the RPM package should be as simple as rpm ivh AdobeReader_enu-7.0.8-1.i386.rpm
.
If you are on a non-RPM-based system, get the tarball, untar it, and run the included
INSTALL script.
Once the reader has been installed, navigate to the View -> Read Out Loud menu. If the options are greyed out, you'll need to hook it up to a speech synthesis system.
Festival is a free text-to-speech (TTS) system written in C++ that'll work.
If you're on a Debian-based system, apt-get install festival
should
do the trick. Others should follow the installation instructions on Festival's Web
site.
In addition to Festival, you need the gnome-speech library, which provides an
interface for applications to convert text to speech. Ubuntu Dapper Drake has this
pre-installed. You can also
manually install the API. Once that's done, try its test-speech
tool to select and test the TTS synthesizers installed on your system.
That's all. Launch the reader again, open a PDF, visit the Read Out Loud menu, and let go of the mouse. Don't forget those headphones if you're in an office, though!
See Festival