* lynx @ Daniel Dalton ` lynx Henry Yen 0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Daniel Dalton @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux., Linux for blind general discussion Hi, http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~purslow/lhfb.html Says that you can't move up/down in a document in lynx by one line. So how do I use speakup with lynx? Or how do I browse the net on my linux box? Thanks. Daniel. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx lynx Daniel Dalton @ ` Henry Yen ` lynx Jude DaShiell ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Henry Yen @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion On Sun, Nov 18, 2007 at 09:36:54AM +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote: > > http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~purslow/lhfb.html > > Says that you can't move up/down in a document in lynx by one line. So > how do I use speakup with lynx? Or how do I browse the net on my linux box? 1. either the insert key or control-P scroll back two lines. 2. either the delete key or control-N scroll forward two lines. lynx also has a "blynx" guide for blind-lynx users. see the lynx help. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Henry Yen @ ` Jude DaShiell ` lynx Henry Yen ` lynx Daniel Dalton ` lynx Geoff Shang 2 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Jude DaShiell @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion That's not necessarily correct. If emacs keys is set true in lynx options then that is correct but only in that case. If you haven't got emacs keys set, try using the up and down arrow keys on the keyboard to move up and down by single lines. On Sun, 18 Nov 2007, Henry Yen wrote: > On Sun, Nov 18, 2007 at 09:36:54AM +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote: >> >> http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~purslow/lhfb.html >> >> Says that you can't move up/down in a document in lynx by one line. So >> how do I use speakup with lynx? Or how do I browse the net on my linux box? > > 1. either the insert key or control-P scroll back two lines. > 2. either the delete key or control-N scroll forward two lines. > > lynx also has a "blynx" guide for blind-lynx users. see the > lynx help. > > _______________________________________________ > Blinux-list mailing list > Blinux-list@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list > ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Jude DaShiell @ ` Henry Yen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Henry Yen @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion That's not my experience. The uparrow and downarrow keys move to the previous and next link. I use insert and delete to scroll up and down. (My .lynxrc has both vi_keys and emacs_keys turned off.) On Sun, Nov 18, 2007 at 21:17:18PM -0600, Jude DaShiell wrote: > That's not necessarily correct. If emacs keys is set true in lynx options > then that is correct but only in that case. If you haven't got emacs keys > set, try using the up and down arrow keys on the keyboard to move up and > down by single lines. > > On Sun, 18 Nov 2007, Henry Yen wrote: > > > On Sun, Nov 18, 2007 at 09:36:54AM +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote: > >> > >> http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~purslow/lhfb.html > >> > >> Says that you can't move up/down in a document in lynx by one line. So > >> how do I use speakup with lynx? Or how do I browse the net on my linux box? > > > > 1. either the insert key or control-P scroll back two lines. > > 2. either the delete key or control-N scroll forward two lines. > > > > lynx also has a "blynx" guide for blind-lynx users. see the > > lynx help. -- Henry Yen Aegis Information Systems, Inc. Senior Systems Programmer Hicksville, New York ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Henry Yen ` lynx Jude DaShiell @ ` Daniel Dalton ` lynx Henry Yen ` lynx Geoff Shang 2 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Daniel Dalton @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion On 19/11/2007 10:16 AM, Henry Yen wrote: > On Sun, Nov 18, 2007 at 09:36:54AM +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote: >> http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~purslow/lhfb.html >> >> Says that you can't move up/down in a document in lynx by one line. So >> how do I use speakup with lynx? Or how do I browse the net on my linux box? > > 1. either the insert key or control-P scroll back two lines. > 2. either the delete key or control-N scroll forward two lines. Well I need to read all the lines on the page? So how do I do that? Otherwise I will miss stuff. > > lynx also has a "blynx" guide for blind-lynx users. see the > lynx help. Got an url? Where is "lynx help"? ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Daniel Dalton @ ` Henry Yen 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Henry Yen @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 08:36:01AM +1100, Daniel Dalton wrote: > Well I need to read all the lines on the page? > So how do I do that? Otherwise I will miss stuff. I don't know that answer, although I'd very much like to find out. > > lynx also has a "blynx" guide for blind-lynx users. see the > > lynx help. > > Got an url? Where is "lynx help"? Just invoke lynx without arguments. Either the help screen comes right up, or an intro screen comes up that will get to the help screen when yu type a question mark. The help screen has a link (possibly hopelessly outdated?) pointing to "blynx" information. -- Henry Yen Aegis Information Systems, Inc. Senior Systems Programmer Hicksville, New York ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Henry Yen ` lynx Jude DaShiell ` lynx Daniel Dalton @ ` Geoff Shang ` lynx Janina Sajka 2 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion Hi, To read the output of Lynx or pretty much any other application in the console, you're going to need to use Speakup's screen review keys. By default, you can use the numpad 7 and 9 keys to read the previous and next line respectively, and 8 to read the current line. The same logic applies to 4 5 and 6 (words) and 1 2 and 3 (characters). You can use numpad-insert plus numpad 9 (page up) to go to the top of the screen, and numpad-insert plus numpad-2 (down arrow) to read from the current curso position to the bottom of the screen. To check out what all the speakup keys do, press keypad-insert plus F1 when in Speakup and either up and down arrow through the list or try pressing keys to see what they do. Press Space to leave keyboard help. In lynx, you can use page-down or Space to go to the next screen, and page-up or b to go back a page. As posted already, insert and delete move the screen display up and down one line (something I previously didn't know). Home and End go to the first and last screen of a document, as do control-A and control-E respectively. Up and Down arrows move you to the next and previous page element (or next and previous line in a multi-line edit field), and right arrow follows a link and left goes back unless you're in any kind of edit field. To get a full and hopefully up to date list of keystrokes in lynx, press "k" when in lynx. Note that unless you use a blinux lynx config (wich I did see somewhere but don't know where), lynx will not automatically make the cursor track where you are in a document. You need to turn on "show cursor" in the options screen which is not exactly straight-forward, or by setting show_cursor=on in your .lynxrc config file. Hope this helps you get started. Geoff. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Geoff Shang @ ` Janina Sajka ` lynx Tom Masterson ` lynx Daniel Dalton 0 siblings, 2 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Janina Sajka @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion Geoff's advice is absolutely on the mark. Lynx with Speakup continues to be a powerful, and very accessible browser. However, you do need to learn Speakup's screen review commands to use lynx effectively, because it doesn't work the way Windows screen readers made Internet Explorer work. My advice is to start lynx with two key command line options--then make these your defaults in the Options menu (accessed with by o) so you don't have to issue this long command every time: lynx -show_cursor -number_fields This will cause the system cursor to track your focus on hyperlinks, which is where you go with up and down arrow, or with TAB and Alt+TAB. Yes, that's correct, Alt+TAB, and not Shift+TAB, which has always been the Unix default. The Lynx for users who are blind document for which you were asking a URI is at: http://leb.net/blinux/blynx/ You can also access it on the help screen of Lynx, accessible by ?, but this wouldn't help you if you don't yet understand how to read documents in lynx. Janina Geoff Shang writes: > Hi, > > To read the output of Lynx or pretty much any other application in the > console, you're going to need to use Speakup's screen review keys. > > By default, you can use the numpad 7 and 9 keys to read the previous and > next line respectively, and 8 to read the current line. The same logic > applies to 4 5 and 6 (words) and 1 2 and 3 (characters). You can use > numpad-insert plus numpad 9 (page up) to go to the top of the screen, and > numpad-insert plus numpad-2 (down arrow) to read from the current curso > position to the bottom of the screen. > > To check out what all the speakup keys do, press keypad-insert plus F1 when > in Speakup and either up and down arrow through the list or try pressing > keys to see what they do. Press Space to leave keyboard help. > > In lynx, you can use page-down or Space to go to the next screen, and > page-up or b to go back a page. As posted already, insert and delete move > the screen display up and down one line (something I previously didn't > know). Home and End go to the first and last screen of a document, as do > control-A and control-E respectively. Up and Down arrows move you to the > next and previous page element (or next and previous line in a multi-line > edit field), and right arrow follows a link and left goes back unless > you're in any kind of edit field. > > To get a full and hopefully up to date list of keystrokes in lynx, press > "k" when in lynx. > > Note that unless you use a blinux lynx config (wich I did see somewhere but > don't know where), lynx will not automatically make the cursor track where > you are in a document. You need to turn on "show cursor" in the options > screen which is not exactly straight-forward, or by setting > > show_cursor=on > > in your .lynxrc config file. > > Hope this helps you get started. > > Geoff. > > _______________________________________________ > Blinux-list mailing list > Blinux-list@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list -- Janina Sajka, Phone: +1.202.595.7777; sip:janina@a11y.org Partner, Capital Accessibility LLC http://CapitalAccessibility.Com Marketing the Owasys 22C talking screenless cell phone in the U.S. and Canada Learn more at http://ScreenlessPhone.Com Chair, Open Accessibility janina@a11y.org Linux Foundation http://a11y.org ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Janina Sajka @ ` Tom Masterson ` lynx Daniel Dalton 1 sibling, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Tom Masterson @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion The only other caveat with lynx is that like most text browsers that I am aware of it doen's handle javascript which means some pages will be unusable in part or full depending on the amount of javascript used. I don't find the file numbering option very useful but that is personal preference. Tom On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 11:52:11AM -0500, Janina Sajka wrote: > Geoff's advice is absolutely on the mark. Lynx with Speakup continues to > be a powerful, and very accessible browser. However, you do need to > learn Speakup's screen review commands to use lynx effectively, because > it doesn't work the way Windows screen readers made Internet Explorer > work. > > My advice is to start lynx with two key command line options--then make > these your defaults in the Options menu (accessed with by o) so you > don't have to issue this long command every time: > > lynx -show_cursor -number_fields > > This will cause the system cursor to track your focus on hyperlinks, > which is where you go with up and down arrow, or with TAB and Alt+TAB. > Yes, that's correct, Alt+TAB, and not Shift+TAB, which has always been > the Unix default. > > The Lynx for users who are blind document for which you were asking a URI is at: > > http://leb.net/blinux/blynx/ > > You can also access it on the help screen of Lynx, accessible by ?, but > this wouldn't help you if you don't yet understand how to read documents > in lynx. > > Janina > > > Geoff Shang writes: > > Hi, > > > > To read the output of Lynx or pretty much any other application in the > > console, you're going to need to use Speakup's screen review keys. > > > > By default, you can use the numpad 7 and 9 keys to read the previous and > > next line respectively, and 8 to read the current line. The same logic > > applies to 4 5 and 6 (words) and 1 2 and 3 (characters). You can use > > numpad-insert plus numpad 9 (page up) to go to the top of the screen, and > > numpad-insert plus numpad-2 (down arrow) to read from the current curso > > position to the bottom of the screen. > > > > To check out what all the speakup keys do, press keypad-insert plus F1 when > > in Speakup and either up and down arrow through the list or try pressing > > keys to see what they do. Press Space to leave keyboard help. > > > > In lynx, you can use page-down or Space to go to the next screen, and > > page-up or b to go back a page. As posted already, insert and delete move > > the screen display up and down one line (something I previously didn't > > know). Home and End go to the first and last screen of a document, as do > > control-A and control-E respectively. Up and Down arrows move you to the > > next and previous page element (or next and previous line in a multi-line > > edit field), and right arrow follows a link and left goes back unless > > you're in any kind of edit field. > > > > To get a full and hopefully up to date list of keystrokes in lynx, press > > "k" when in lynx. > > > > Note that unless you use a blinux lynx config (wich I did see somewhere but > > don't know where), lynx will not automatically make the cursor track where > > you are in a document. You need to turn on "show cursor" in the options > > screen which is not exactly straight-forward, or by setting > > > > show_cursor=on > > > > in your .lynxrc config file. > > > > Hope this helps you get started. > > > > Geoff. > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Blinux-list mailing list > > Blinux-list@redhat.com > > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list > > -- > > Janina Sajka, Phone: +1.202.595.7777; sip:janina@a11y.org > Partner, Capital Accessibility LLC http://CapitalAccessibility.Com > > Marketing the Owasys 22C talking screenless cell phone in the U.S. and Canada > Learn more at http://ScreenlessPhone.Com > > Chair, Open Accessibility janina@a11y.org > Linux Foundation http://a11y.org > > _______________________________________________ > Blinux-list mailing list > Blinux-list@redhat.com > https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Janina Sajka ` lynx Tom Masterson @ ` Daniel Dalton ` lynx Janina Sajka 1 sibling, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Daniel Dalton @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion On 20/11/2007 3:52 AM, Janina Sajka wrote: > Geoff's advice is absolutely on the mark. Lynx with Speakup continues to > be a powerful, and very accessible browser. However, you do need to > learn Speakup's screen review commands to use lynx effectively, because > it doesn't work the way Windows screen readers made Internet Explorer > work. Ok I think I have worked out bits of it. > > My advice is to start lynx with two key command line options--then make > these your defaults in the Options menu (accessed with by o) so you > don't have to issue this long command every time: > > lynx -show_cursor -number_fields > > This will cause the system cursor to track your focus on hyperlinks, > which is where you go with up and down arrow, or with TAB and Alt+TAB. > Yes, that's correct, Alt+TAB, and not Shift+TAB, which has always been > the Unix default. Ok I'll a tempt to do that thanks. > > The Lynx for users who are blind document for which you were asking a URI is at: > > http://leb.net/blinux/blynx/ > > You can also access it on the help screen of Lynx, accessible by ?, but > this wouldn't help you if you don't yet understand how to read documents > in lynx. I think I saw it this morning. Two more questions: 1. How do I locate and enter info in to fields? 2. How do I navigate with brltty? Just with my thumb keys? Thanks. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Daniel Dalton @ ` Janina Sajka ` lynx Tim Chase ` (2 more replies) 0 siblings, 3 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Janina Sajka @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion Daniel Dalton writes: > Two more questions: > 1. How do I locate and enter info in to fields? Well, this need is why I personally choose the "Links and Form Fields Are Numbered" setting for the numeric keypad in the Lynx Options screen. And, it's the reason I gave you a lynx command with two arguments. The second argument turns this feature on from the command line: lynx -show_cursor -number_fields As you've heard from others in this thread, not everyone likes this feature, but many of us consider it absolutely indispensible. In essence -number_fields causes every hyperlink and/or form control to be assigned a number sequentially. So, even before you navigate the page, as you just listen to Speakup read it out from top to bottom, you can spot links and form fields--because Lynx will speak a number before voicing their text, and the numbers you hear will be sequential starting at 1, then 2, then 3, etc. Now that you know this, navigating with up/down arrow (or TAB/Alt+TAB) becomes highly useful because you always and only ever land on either a hyperlink or a form field. * When you land on a hyperlink, pressing Numpad 5 will read the * sequential number Lynx assigned to that hyperlink, plus the left * and right brackets that surround the number, and the first word * of the hyperlink. To hear this in context, press Numpad 8. * When you land on a form field, Numpad 5 will read the sequential * number and indicate the underscore char, telling you this is a * blank line awaiting your input. * Drop down boxes are a tad trickier to understand. You'll hear * the sequential number, followed by a second number and then some * phrase. The number and phrase you hear is usually 1 and some * value, but may be something else. It reflects whiach of several * choices the page author has provided as default for that drop * down. A drop down will be a limited list of things for you to choose among. It might be a list of States of the U.S., for example. To activate your ability to set your selection, press enter, then arrow up/down through the list until you find the selection you want, then press enter to lock it in. Since this literally a popup box in the middle of other text already displayed from the page, you'll need to learn to ignore the "background words" that Speakup will read out. These will surround the selection option, both before and after it. Speakup isn't given any programmatic basis to ignore background text. This is one place where graphical browsers have an edge over Speakup and Lynx, but a little practice will probably suffice for working with drop downs. > 2. How do I navigate with brltty? Just with my thumb keys? > Can't help you there. Sorry. A brltty person will need to answer this one. Janina ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Janina Sajka @ ` Tim Chase ` lynx Daniel Dalton ` lynx Geoff Shang 2 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Tim Chase @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion > second argument turns this feature on from the command line: > > lynx -show_cursor -number_fields I use these features frequently enough that it's helpful to have them in Lynx config file: SHOW_CURSOR: TRUE DEFAULT_KEYPAD_MODE: LINKS_AND_FIELDS_ARE_NUMBERED (I like to have both numbered, but if you just want one or the other, you can select your preferred variant). I also like to use vi-keys, which can choke on text-entry fields, so I have the following two lines: VI_KEYS_ALWAYS_ON: TRUE TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION: TRUE That way, I can skim over all fields with my h/j/k/l keys, and then when I get to the field I want, I use <enter> to activate the field. Otherwise, I constantly end up with a string of "j" or "k" characters in my text-entry fields. I tend to fly in advanced mode (rather than novice mode) using DEFAULT_USER_MODE: ADVANCED and it's helpful to know that if you're editing a multi-line textbox, you can spawn an external editor. On my Debian installation, that's /usr/bin/sensible-editor which happens to be pointed at vim, but you can customize that. The lines from my lynxrc are in this thread where they were discussed previously: http://www.redhat.com/archives/blinux-list/2005-May/msg00046.html Because the Lynx config-parser is a bit borked, and reads the /etc/lynx.cfg differently from the ~/.lynxrc, I tend to create a .lynx.cfg file with the settings I want and then alias "lynx" to "lynx -cfg=~/.lynx.cfg" so it pulls in the settings a .lynxrc doesn't respect. Hope this helps, -tim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Janina Sajka ` lynx Tim Chase @ ` Daniel Dalton ` lynx Tim Chase ` lynx Geoff Shang 2 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread From: Daniel Dalton @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion On 21/11/2007 2:22 AM, Janina Sajka wrote: > > Well, this need is why I personally choose the "Links and Form Fields > Are Numbered" setting for the numeric keypad in the Lynx Options screen. > And, it's the reason I gave you a lynx command with two arguments. The > second argument turns this feature on from the command line: > > lynx -show_cursor -number_fields How do I get it to automatically do that at startup of lynx? (What do I add to my .lynxsrc file?) Thanks for your help. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Daniel Dalton @ ` Tim Chase 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Tim Chase @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion >> lynx -show_cursor -number_fields > > How do I get it to automatically do that at startup of lynx? > (What do I add to my .lynxsrc file?) From within Lynx, you can go to the [O]ptions menu and change the options for both the "Show Cursor" option and the "Keypad Mode". Make sure you've checked the box at the top for "Save Options to Disk", and then use the "Accept Changes" to write the options to your ~/.lynxrc Frustrated that not all options in the /etc/lynx.cfg file can be controlled/overridden via the .lynxrc, I tend to use alias lynx='lynx -cfg=~/.lynx.cfg' in my .bash_aliases file and then save my modified copy of /etc/lynx.cfg as ~/.lynx.cfg That way, I can control things like the colors, the message timeouts, and the TEXTFIELDS_NEED_ACTIVATION setting which the .lynxrc file doesn't give you access to. However, if all you need are the above two items, the .lynxrc file can control them just fine and uses the [O]ptions interface. -tim ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Re: lynx ` lynx Janina Sajka ` lynx Tim Chase ` lynx Daniel Dalton @ ` Geoff Shang 2 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: Geoff Shang @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Linux for blind general discussion Janina Sajka wrote: > Since this literally a popup box in the > middle of other text already displayed from the page, you'll need to > learn to ignore the "background words" that Speakup will read out. These > will surround the selection option, both before and after it. Speakup > isn't given any programmatic basis to ignore background text. This is > one place where graphical browsers have an edge over Speakup and Lynx, > but a little practice will probably suffice for working with drop downs. I notice that more recent versions of Speakup have highlight as a cursor tracking option. Does this cope with the option box problem? I don't have a new enough version on my machine so haven't tested it. Geoff. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
* Lynx:
@ Luke Davis
` Lynx BLINUX Documentation Project
0 siblings, 1 reply; 16+ messages in thread
From: Luke Davis @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: blinux-list
I require two different lynx installations:
The latest version, and an older one; but I'm not sure what version; Oh
wait, it's:
v2.6
and
v2.4.2
Does anyone know where I might get those?
Luke J. Davis
-------------
ldavis@dynanet.com - ldavis@nfbcal.org - consultant@lonestarbbs.com
___________________________________________________________________
"captain, I believe I speek for all of us, when I say,
to hell with orders!"
-+-cmdr Data, to captain Picard, STARTREK: "first contact"-+-
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread* Re: Lynx Lynx: Luke Davis @ ` BLINUX Documentation Project 0 siblings, 0 replies; 16+ messages in thread From: BLINUX Documentation Project @ UTC (permalink / raw) To: Luke Davis; +Cc: blinux-list, linux-access aloha, luke! to get lynx 2.4.2, 2.5, or 2.6, go to: ftp://ftp2.cc.ukans.edu/pub/lynx however, i agree with joel--you really don't want to use 2.4.2, especially since it is riddled with bugs that were fixed in 2.5 and 2.4.2 furthermore, if you are going to compile lynx 2.6, you should also grab the composite patch, which contains bug-fixes and patches for the 2.6 release... the composite patch can be found at: http://www.mtsu.edu/~ripa0003/lynx.html lynx-dev has recently organized LIBIDO: the Lynx Initiative for Biniary Distribution and Openess, through which you can download pre-compiled versions of lynx, but it is still best to compile your own... LIBIDO's home page is: http://www.crl.com/~subir/lynx/binaries.html safe surfing--keep a sharp ear cocked for riptides, gregory. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Gregory J. Rosmatia, oedipus@leb.net or blinux@leb.net http://leb.net/blinux ftp://leb.net/pub/blinux ftp://leb.net/incoming/blinux electronic archivist and webmaster for The BLINUX Documentation Project ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 16+ messages in thread
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