

It supports AT-SPI, so it works with the GNOME desktop, Mozilla Firefox/Thunderbird, OpenOffice/LibreOffice and GTK+, KDE/Qt and Java Swing/SWT applications. The development of Orca was started by Sun Microsystems as part of the GNOME project with contributions from many community members, but since Oracle acquired Sun Microsystems in 2010, Orca turned into a completely community-driven project. Supports Mozilla Firefox, Microsoft Internet Explorer, Word, Excel and Outlook Express, and Mozilla Thunderbird. It also supports multi-tab navigation.īundled with recent versions of Windows, this basic screen reader makes use of MSAA. Metalmouth is a simplified open source screen-reader application which can be used to read out any HTML5 web pages and interact with most HTML5 input controls. Includes support for MSAA, the Java Access Bridge, and PDF. Screen magnifier with low-vision speech capabilities. Turns Emacs into a "complete audio desktop". Supports Microsoft Active Accessibility (MSAA) and the Java Access Bridge. The ChromeVox website has more information on the transition to the version bundled with ChromeOS.

The ChromeVox Classic Chrome extension is in maintenance-only mode. Screen readerĪvailable to download part of most Linux distributionsĬhromeOS or, with a speech processor, Linux, Mac, WindowsĬhromeVox is a screen reader for Chrome and ChromeOS.

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