So, Ulysses has internal links now. So, we now have what could be an accessible personal knowledge bank. Well I mean there's Org-mode but like, that's Emacs and no one wants to go anywhere near Escape Meta Alt Control Super. Obsidian is still not accessible. Neither is Logseq. I briefly tried others, like Joplan, and neither were they.
So, the crazy thing is, Ulysses is Apple only. Mac, iPhone, iPad. So, lol, just about our only choice is Mac, or Linux with Emacs. And of course most blind people use Windows. So yay. What a fucking mess.
Please boost for reach: There's an open issue on Github about adding scripting support to Retroarch. This would enable scripts like the Pokemon Access mod to be ran on Retroarch, hopefully allowing blind people to actually play the game while mobile. I tried it out and am already making a team in Pokemon Emerald, and in the woods in the first few areas of the game! If anyone is good with adding Lua to things, or if anyone is good at modding games and wants to enhance the Pokemon Access scripts, I'd really appreciate you looking into this.
It's important to add ALT text to images in social media posts, otherwise you're excluding 1 in 5 people from your messages. It's super important in election time for politician's to add ALT text to social media, and it's so easy.
Hm. The @EUCommission had a website about accessibility overlays and... Now it's hidden under a SharePoint login? Did someone insist they take it down?
Often times, tools like Trusted Tester certifications are not enough to prove how usable a product is until you truly put it in front of real users who can assess the validity of the software, services and platforms that companies are building. Please everyone, let's change the conversations when we are meeting with these companies. Are we buying into equal and equitable experiences with our purchases and how can we be assured of this? Transparency is crucial.
@JeffBishop Yep. Got it. Yes. Trusted Tester allows someone to learn just one testing methodology using just one accessibility testing tool without actually requiring manual testing with screen readers, keyboard-only, color contrast, etc. It also fails to emphasize shifting left. #accessibility#TrustedTester#fail
#Accessibility tip: if sharing an image of text on social media along with a link to some original source, that link is a lot easier for people to reach if you place it directly in the post instead of the image's alt text.
Please remember that WCAG itself is the bare minimum of #accessibility. Conforming to WCAG does not guarantee something is accessible. It does not even guarantee something is usable. All WCAG does is provide you with a starting point. Lots of WCAG failures suggest the page has not even made it to the starting line.
I think Shawn does a great job highlighting the accessibility features in Venngage and how Canva lacks most of these features. It is important to note that the ability to export to an accessible PDF requires a paid Venngage business or enterprise account. Venngage is best for companies that can provide a paid account to their employees. It is a shame that Venngage's Premium account does not offer the ability to export an accessible PDF. #accessibilityhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRH-2zYU-UE
Here's a subtle #accessibility interaction I frequently see developers overlook:
#SwiftUI makes it very easy to customize Button's appearance at the call-site, either by decorating the Button's label or by applying View Modifiers to the Button itself.
Headline: "I Don't Understand why we Need This!": Sighted User Furious at Accessibility Feature for Blind People.
Reginald Cavendish, of Castle Combe in Wiltshire, today made an impassioned plea for a technology company to reconsider their new #accessibility feature for #blind and #lowVision users, aimed at creating visual descriptions of images in a privacy-preserving way.
Speaking to reporters from his 1,800-acre estate, Reginald communicated his confusion about why the feature was being considered in the first place.
"I'm not clear on exactly who asked for this," he said. "When I need something, I ask one of my staff, and it just tends to get done. I take great Solace in that human touch, and I can't really comprehend why people would want computers doing things for them! My son has some friends who've seen disabled people on the television, and he didn't understand it either."
When asked whether he supported increased independence for people who are unable to see, he responded: "Look, some people have the money to pay people to be at their beck and call, to describe images or pick up their eyedrop bottles or what-have-you. I understand that doesn't go for everyone, but if someone can't afford human help, I'd suggest they'd be much happier making peace with the scraps they're thrown by society."
Editor's note: Reginald was asked to describe the featured image for this article. "Man on lawn," he offered over one shoulder, before moving off for a spot of afternoon shooting.
Kudos to Quezon City government for making their website more accessible. According to this article, the website is now passing the #WCAG 2.1 at AA level.
I visited the website and, well, it is accessible I guess. But like other Philippine government websites, the UX is passable but still terrible lol. And it seems that they're using an overlay for the screen reader feature? Big ick for me. #accessibility#a11y
I took my daughters to see the new Garfield movie at our local #Harkins theater. They have a new kiosk that's used for selecting your seats. It is of course inaccessible. Even worse, theater staff didn't have a plan for providing reasonable accommodations so that happened and I've sent them a letter. Ug. Really people? Isn't it 2024 now? #accessibility#fail
#AccessKit question. I'd like to recommend this to developers so they can make their projects more #accessible. I noticed there's no documentation. Is it easy enough to learn without the need for documentation? If not, I'm hesitant to recommend something that I know developers are going to struggle with. It's tough enough asking them to make their apps accessible when they don't know much about us, let alone asking them to learn a new library with no docs. #Accessibility#Blind#VisuallyImpaired