1. Welcome to Cthulhu
Introducing the Cthulhu screen reader
Joanmarie Diggsjoanied@gnome.org
Creative Commons Share Alike 3.0
Welcome to Cthulhu
Cthulhu is a free, open source, flexible, and extensible
screen reader that provides access to the graphical desktop via
speech and refreshable braille.
Cthulhu works with applications and toolkits that support
the Assistive Technology Service Provider Interface (AT-SPI), which
is the primary assistive technology infrastructure for Linux and
Solaris. Applications and toolkits supporting the AT-SPI include
Gtk+, Qt, Java Swing, LibreOffice, Gecko, WebKitGtk, and Chrome/Chromium.
Launching Cthulhu
To launch Cthulhu:
The method for configuring Cthulhu to be launched
automatically as your preferred screen reader will depend upon
which desktop environment you use.
To toggle Cthulhu on and off in GNOME, press
SuperAltS.
Type cthulhu, along with any optional parameters, in a
terminal window or within the Run dialog and then press
Return.
Load-Time Options
The following options can be specified when launching Cthulhu
in a terminal window or within the Run dialog:
-h, --help: Show the help message
-v, --version: Show the version of
Cthulhu
-s, --setup: Set up user preferences
-u, --user-prefs=dirname:
Use dirname as the alternate directory for user
preferences
-e, --enable=option: Force use
of option, where the option can be one of the following:
speech
braille
braille-monitor
-d, --disable=option: Prevent the
use of an option, where the option can be one of the
following:
speech
braille
braille-monitor
-p, --profile=filename:
Import a profile from a given Cthulhu profile file
-r, --replace: Replace a currently-running Cthulhu
-l, --list-apps: Print the known running
applications
--debug: Send debug output to debug-YYYY-MM-DD-HH:MM:SS.out
--debug-file=filename: Send debug output to
the specified file