7
submitted 1 day ago by dankeck to c/a11y@lemmy.world
19
submitted 3 days ago by dankeck to c/disability@beehaw.org

[When Carter] decided to establish himself as a supporter of disability rights during the 1976 presidential election, he visited Warm Springs to make that promise. After he was elected president, however, Carter often struggled to implement key parts of his agenda, and disability rights was no exception. So disabled people had to step in to do the work that the non-disabled simply couldn't get done on their own.

[-] dankeck 15 points 2 weeks ago

What do you suppose is the name of the point-of-sale software they're using?

7
submitted 1 month ago by dankeck to c/disability@beehaw.org

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/25631671

How to Train Friends and Family on a Screen Reader

November 26, 2024 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. EST

Learning access technology can appear daunting to a newly blind person. Finding quality access technology training can also be difficult for several factors. This is where technology savvy friends and family can help someone start learning how to use a screen reader. Join the National Federation of the Blind on Tuesday, November 26, from 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. eastern to learn how you can teach a friend or family member how to get started with a screen reader. We will cover:

  • How a screen reader works
  • How screen readers present content
  • Common keyboard shortcuts to start with
  • Further training resources to learn how to use multiple screen readers
1
submitted 1 month ago by dankeck to c/disabled@lemm.ee

How to Train Friends and Family on a Screen Reader

November 26, 2024 2:00 – 3:30 p.m. EST

Learning access technology can appear daunting to a newly blind person. Finding quality access technology training can also be difficult for several factors. This is where technology savvy friends and family can help someone start learning how to use a screen reader. Join the National Federation of the Blind on Tuesday, November 26, from 2:00 p.m.-3:30 p.m. eastern to learn how you can teach a friend or family member how to get started with a screen reader. We will cover:

  • How a screen reader works
  • How screen readers present content
  • Common keyboard shortcuts to start with
  • Further training resources to learn how to use multiple screen readers
[-] dankeck 2 points 1 month ago

Does the image contain text?

Yes: … and the text is also present as real text nearby.

Use an empty alt attribute. See Decorative Images.

An important case that is often overlooked!

4
submitted 1 month ago by dankeck to c/a11y@lemmy.world

Mu-An Chiou talks about trying to improve accessibility, without support or resources, at GitHub prior to its purchase by Microsoft.

Mu-An writes:

Eventually, I found that there are tons of accessibility issues that are just stale, and a lot of them were just like: this icon button isn’t labeled. I looked at them and thought oh that’s easy. I will fix it.

At one point I added so many aria-labels that AT users got mad that they’re getting misused.

Yes that was me. I am very sorry. I had no idea what I was doing. But then I learned the error of my ways and tried to be better.

9
submitted 1 month ago by dankeck to c/disabled@lemm.ee

Shared by @A11yAlicia@mastodon.social

Nike’s new Elite EasyOn backpack was designed with innovative features making it accessible for as many athletes as possible, including those with low dexterity or motor skills.

Originally developed for athletes competing in the Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, the backpack is now available to everyone through the company’s online store for $150.

4
submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by dankeck to c/dotnet@programming.dev

Lots of focus on AI, as you would expect from Microsoft, but also sessions on C#, Blazor, Entity Framework, VS and VS Code, microservices, performance, testing, security, and accessibility

[-] dankeck 1 points 1 month ago

Thanks for sharing this article. This is a good quote: "the opposite of not being literal is not that it’s not true. The opposite of literal is to be interpretive." Also, I'd never heard of mapping the stories in the gospels to observances in the liturgical year.

-2
submitted 1 month ago by dankeck to c/christianity@faithlemmy.online

I'd like to recommend a book called At the Gates: Disability, Justice and the Churches by Naomi Lawson Jacobs and Emily Richardson. (Jacobs is on Mastodon: @naomilawsonjacobs@hcommons.social)

It's a powerful book describing the experience of some disabled folks engaging with the Christian churches, including

  • having difficulty accessing church services, due to physical barriers or inaccessible technology.
  • being barred from exercising their spiritual gifts because of the charity model of disability, treating them as objects of pity instead of participants.
  • being accosted by fellow congregants and strangers with attempts at miraculous healings without their consent.
  • worshiping a Savior who retains his wounds after his resurrection, rather than them being erased or ignored.

What has stayed with me the most since I read the book last year is that several Christians with disabilities describe heaven not as a state where their disabilities will be taken away, but a state where the world will be fully accessible to them as they are.

8
submitted 3 months ago by dankeck to c/a11y@lemmy.world

Discovered via the Accessibility Weekly newsletter

3
submitted 3 months ago by dankeck to c/a11y@lemmy.world

Most mouse users can quickly understand the need to make a website accessible by keyboard, for users who do not use a mouse due to a motor disability or other reasons. But what if a user also does not have the use of a keyboard?

Janaki Konar just finished a presentation on the technology named Switch Control in iOS, or Switch Access in Android, which allows users to use their device using a single motion or small number of motions. This can include sipping and puffing into a mouthpiece, or tapping a pillow. The speaker describes how a user can customize these systems to be more efficient (for example, binding a second action to a long press, or grouping a set of actions into a "recipe" that can be repeated.) And the presentation introduces what makes software easy to use, and how user interfaces can be designed poorly to slow down and frustrate users of Switch Control and Switch Access.

This presentation and many more are part of the free Inclusive Design 24 event going on right now. Follow @InclusiveDesign24@indieweb.social for more information.

9
submitted 3 months ago by dankeck to c/olympics@sh.itjust.works

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/21984550

Article by Steven Aquino

An excerpt follows:

For sporting events like the Olympics and Paralympics, ... it’s paramount the (audio describer) be knowledgeable of the sport they’re describing; the quality would be otherwise sullied if the describer didn’t, for example, know the intricacies of basketball or anything else. The information conveyed has to be delivered with the proper context behind it in order for a Blind or low vision person to visualize a moment in their mind.

6
submitted 3 months ago by dankeck to c/a11y@lemmy.world

Article by Steven Aquino

An excerpt follows:

For sporting events like the Olympics and Paralympics, ... it’s paramount the (audio describer) be knowledgeable of the sport they’re describing; the quality would be otherwise sullied if the describer didn’t, for example, know the intricacies of basketball or anything else. The information conveyed has to be delivered with the proper context behind it in order for a Blind or low vision person to visualize a moment in their mind.

[-] dankeck 5 points 6 months ago

MC Frontalot - It Is Pitch Dark

https://youtu.be/4nigRT2KmCE

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dankeck

joined 1 year ago