Both packages had failed on several installation attempts on this Dell
hardware which I think is an OP21G. The Lotus symphony package is an
absolute bear even for sighted people to figure out how to download it
from http://www.softpedia.com/ but once downloaded and installed over
here, lotus symphony 3.01 was accessible right out of the box. Same java
version used for libreoffice and openoffice and j_win had been used to
install accessibility support. Finally, just one version of jre on the
machine which is the most current version. What happens to make the other
two packages fail and how it happens, we still haven't figured out over
here. Later I'm going to get the Microsoft xml viewer down and
investigate that .xcu file with it and see what I can figure out but that
will be a back burner project over here. If one of the installations that
have libreoffice and openoffice accessible also has md5sum and can use it
to get an md5sum string on their .xcu files I could get an md5sum on my
.xcu file once I reinstall libreoffice and we could compare strings. If
the strings are different, then the accessibility stanza described to me
earlier almost certainly is missing from the current version of
libreoffice. All in all, this has been an interesting experience so far
and for my money remains an open mystery locally for us here.
---------------------------------------------------------------- Jude
<jdashiel-at-shellworld-dot-net>
<http://www.shellworld.net/~jdashiel/nj.html>
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- [libreoffice-users] libreoffice/openoffice nvda accessibility · Jude DaShiell
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