@SwiftOnSecurity Watch where they get wet when they see a guillotine.
I figured some people here might be interested in knowing that very long range keyboard and braille is possible over the mobile network to a windows computer without much work. I've known this to be possible in itself for some time, but I just found a way to do it without significant work beyond program installation. It was a bit of a headache before, you needed port forwarding, setting up a VPN server, having the VPN server on the same LAN as the PC which was to be controlled and which was to send out braille, having a dynamic DNS/static IP, and so on. That's no longer needed. basically, it can now be done by just installing two programs and paying $50 for one of them. The programs combined are Virtual Here www.virtualhere.com (the $50 program), and Tailscale www.tailscale.com I am using a Raspberry Pi 4, but would be surprised if a 3 wouldn't work. The steps are basically nothing special. Just image the pi with your favourite imager and make sure the unit has a connection to the internet somehow. Install tailscale on the Windows machine and the PI https://tailscale.com/kb/1017/install and then install VirtualHere Server on the PI https://www.virtualhere.com/usb_server_software Finally, run the Virtualhere client on your Windows machine https://www.virtualhere.com/usb_client_software After everything is installed and with both devices connected to the internet, in the VH client, hit shift+f10 and go to "specify usb servers". Hit add, type in your VH server's tailscale IP (the one which starts with 100 and which you can get from the Pi itself or from tailscale on the web), and hit OK. It should see your hub in the treeview. BTW, for some weird reason, both NVDA and Jaws occasionally don't see the contents of the treeview, just alt+tab to another window and alt+tab back and you should be able to see everything. Go down to the name of the server in your client, hit shift+f10, and hit "autouse all on this server. Now, plug your keyboard and braille display into your PI. What should happen is that the device gets detected, drivers installed, and it should generally be like you're plugging directly into the PC. Keyboards you can use right away, of course, but braille displays may need to be looked for/refreshed as you normally would with your reader of choice. I realize that VH allows one USB device free, but you can't install the client as a service and use the free server. You'll probably want to install the client as a service because you'll want your keyboard up and running as soon as you reboot the Windows device. Also, if you're using a keyboard and braille display at the same time, that's seen as two devices. Finally, I haven't tried this on Linux but it should work. It should work on OSX as well, but the VH client is not accessible with VO, the author knows about this and may fix it after the Sequoia release. As I said, the benefit here is easy and continual connectivity over very long ranges.
This is neat
Because of the Twitter/X ban, many people from Brazil are moving to Mastodon, including Artists, so let's do an Art Share for them only! Let's help them get the boost they need around here!
ARTISTS FROM BRAZIL
- In the comments, introduce yourself and show your art!
PEOPLE NOT FROM BRAZIL
- Boost this post and the ones from brazilian artists in the comments!
Não fala inglês? Confira a primeira resposta abaixo!
@foone temperature in Celcius, but still crazy-date formatting?
@anon_opin blunt HB pencils.
they'd probably eat the crayons :(
@jamesoff the book is
Has Anyone Seen Charlotte Salter?
by Nicci French
just in case anyone else was wondering what fine literature or pulp fiction was being consumed :)
@Dtl @JennyList @trans_rescue oooooh, a magic-smoke emitting one. like it!
maybe random value, but black stuffing crochet-hooked out in places for the smoke
@jamesoff reads an email, smashes the phone on the floor.
ding noise from his pocket.
pulls out phone, reads another email, smashes the phone on the floor.
@jamesoff noooooooo
@Dtl @JennyList @trans_rescue this, but probably an implausably high value.
/goes to check what the banding for 'open circuit' would look like
@JennyList @trans_rescue I'd buy one if I can get a zero ohm version. Say £20?
@spv @JennyList @trans_rescue nice. my last was an X31. sadly the mobo went sizzle, so it is no more :'(
Steve:
frequent overthinker, compulsive fixer, digester-then-explainer, "why?" question relishing father, minor-irritant partner, excessive disassembler, original-form hacker, high-efficiency googler, borderline-competent car-fixer, expert-level car-breaker, faster-by-qwerty communicator, indiscriminate photo-taker, Leatherman owner.