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Four puzzle games: The Room, The Room Two, The Room Three, and The Room: Old Sins

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Firefox 117 improves YouTube browsing when using screen readers
hkc.social Nick Giannak III (@nick@hkc.social)

Big update to Firefox (117) dropped if using a screen reader. YouTube video lists, and videos themselves, now scroll much better than before. Possibly best example of infinite scroll on Windows now, although I'll wait for consensus on this one. Thanks to @jcsteh@aus.social for listening to @quinn an...

cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/7474838

> Via @nick@hkc.social: > > Big update to Firefox (117) dropped if using a screen reader. YouTube video lists, and videos themselves, now scroll much better than before.

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Firefox 117 improves YouTube browsing when using screen readers
hkc.social Nick Giannak III (@nick@hkc.social)

Big update to Firefox (117) dropped if using a screen reader. YouTube video lists, and videos themselves, now scroll much better than before. Possibly best example of infinite scroll on Windows now, although I'll wait for consensus on this one. Thanks to @jcsteh@aus.social for listening to @quinn an...

Via @nick@hkc.social: > Big update to Firefox (117) dropped if using a screen reader. YouTube video lists, and videos themselves, now scroll much better than before.

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Ticket giveaway for State of the Browser conference in London
a11y.social TetraLogical (@TetraLogical@a11y.social)

TetraLogical is proud to sponsor State of the Browser on Saturday 23 September 2023. Brought to you by London Web Standards, this is both an in-person and online conference held at The Barbican Centre in London. We’re doing a free giveaway of two in-person tickets and three online tickets. If in...

This Friday, 2023-08-25, a vendor is randomly choosing winners to receive a free ticket to a September conference hosted by London Web Standards.

Entry is by replying to this post on Mastodon.

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Microsoft’s new Office default theme and font arrives in September
  • I like Aptos a lot better than Calibri, but I already miss the font's original name, Bierstadt.

  • Papers, Please 10th anniversary sale: $4.99 -> $1.99
    mastodon.social Lucas Pope (@dukope@mastodon.social)

    Attached: 2 images "Papers, Please" is 10 years old today! Hell of a time slip. Thank you to everyone that's supported me and my games over the last decade. To celebrate: * $1.99 sale until the weekend, all platforms * Fresh goods + soundtrack * $100K donation to rescue.org * New de-make: "LCD, P...

    Lucas Pope (@dukope@mastodon.social)

    Follow the creator at @dukope@mastodon social

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    New Threads app fails accessibility test, reports UK consultancy

    Meta's new social media network, Threads, launches without taking into account how users with various disabilities access software.

    As a follow up to a similar post from last month, here is a more detailed list of barriers to access, compiled by AbilityNet.

    • Inaccessible images
    • No headings
    • Navigation issues
    • Button trouble
    • Reloading difficulties
    • Color contrast problems
    • Media issues
    • Portrait-only orientation
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    TIL British Columbia created a font to support Indigenous languages
  • I edited my post and added a link to the font.

  • TIL British Columbia created a font to support Indigenous languages
    www2.gov.bc.ca BC Sans Typeface - Province of British Columbia

    BC Sans is a new typeface for government.

    Via the A11yTalks webinar Accessibility in Action: Indigenous Communities by Meggan Van Harten

    Link to font:https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/governments/services-for-government/policies-procedures/bc-visual-identity/bc-sans

    >Several typefaces were examined that matched the criteria and a handful of these were tested. Noto Sans stood out as an option as it already had an extensive set of characters supporting over 800 languages, including many Indigenous languages in Canada. The typeface was also originally designed for enhanced readability on-screen. > >Under an open-font license, Noto Sans presented the opportunity to access the font files and modify and improve its character sets. With expertise from a typographic Indigenous language expert, and from FirstVoices (an initiative of the First Peoples’ Cultural Council), additional characters and syllabic glyphs were added to support Indigenous languages in B.C. This new typeface was named BC Sans and first launched in 2019.

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    State of Ohio seeking input on new accessibility initiative

    >Accessible Ohio is the first-ever coordinated effort in Ohio to support businesses, communities, attractions, and venues in becoming more accessible and inclusive. > >... > >We are seeking input on strategies to reach local partners and share information about Accessible Ohio services, personal or observed experiences in public activities and environments, examples of ways to overcome barriers to access, and possible funding resources for partners.

    If you have a disability and have been excluded at a place of public accommodation in Ohio, this event may be an opportunity to bring the problem to the attention of state employees.

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    New Low in the Accessibility "Industry:" Overlay Company Sues Globally-Recognized Accessibility Expert
    www.lflegal.com New Low in the Accessibility "Industry:" Overlay Company Sues Globally-Recognized Accessibility Expert

    This is an article about a lawsuit filed by AudioEye, a multi-million dollar accessibility company, against Adrian Roselli, a long-time leader in the global digital accessibility community. Adrian has been a vocal critic, as have I, against one-line of code software that claims to make websites acce

    New Low in the Accessibility "Industry:" Overlay Company Sues Globally-Recognized Accessibility Expert

    Via the Focus State newsletter:

    >This is an article about a lawsuit filed against a digital accessibility advocate named Adrian Roselli. Adrian has been outspoken against a type of software called an overlay. This type of overlay promises to make websites accessible for disabled people with just one line of code.

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    Threads Launch Fails to Prioritize Accessibility. - Centre For Accessibility Australia
    www.accessibility.org.au Threads Launch Fails to Prioritize Accessibility. - Centre For Accessibility Australia

    Meta’s latest venture, Threads, aimed at luring users away from Twitter, is receiving criticism for its lack of accessibility features, leaving users with disability feeling left behind. The new platform, despite its attempt to compete with Twitter, offers limited accessibility tools, customization ...

    Threads Launch Fails to Prioritize Accessibility. - Centre For Accessibility Australia

    With Meta’s claim that Threads will “focus on kindness,” it remains unclear how accessibility aligns with the platform’s definition of inclusivity. As CEO and founder of web accessibility company UserWay, Allon Mason, stressed, social media should be accessible to everyone, including the 1 in 5 individuals living with disability.

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    Who is to Blame for Delay in ADA Web Access Regs? It's not the DOJ
    www.lflegal.com Who is to Blame for Delay in ADA Web Access Regs? It's not the DOJ

    The 33rd anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) falls on Wednesday, July 26, in just about two weeks. Will that be the day that official notice of long-promised web accessibility regulations for state and local governments in the United States is finally published? The official

    Who is to Blame for Delay in ADA Web Access Regs? It's not the DOJ

    Via @LFLegal@mastodon.social

    >This is an article about the delay in web access regulations. The regulations will help state and local government agencies in the United States make sure websites work for disabled people. They will help people with disabilities fully participate in all activities of state and local governments. This includes education, recreation, citizenship, and more. The regulations have been delayed. They are now stuck in a part of the United States government called the Office of Management and Budget, or OMB. The OMB helps the President of the United States meet their goals about what regulations are needed. The wait for regulations has been too long. The Americans with Disabilities Act is about to have its 33rd anniversary. It is long past time for these regulations.

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    Pocket Casts Plus increases subscription pricing to $33.99 from $10
  • I subscribed to Pocket Casts when it was owned by public media entities, and it worked well. But after they sold it off, I just switched to AntennaPod and it does everything I need too.

  • Online Dyslexia Simulation Is Compelling, Powerful, and Wrong - International Dyslexia Association

    Recently there was a thread in the IAAP discussion board about "dyslexia simulators," software that is meant to simulate the experience to people who do not have dyslexia. The simulators work by taking text on a web page and randomly switching letters around.

    In the discussion thread, there was a dissenting voice who shared an article by Carolyn D. Cowen, who objects to the use of these simulators.

    To quote Cowen:

    >As a person with dyslexia, as someone with dyslexia running throughout generations of both branches of my family, and, finally, as an educator who has taught countless children and adults with dyslexia over the decades, I feel pretty confident saying that this simulation is NOTHING like what it is like for most people who have dyslexia. > >The simulation is a devilishly clever coding trick and well intentioned, but contrary to the dramatic headlines, it does little to deepen anyone’s understanding about what having dyslexia is really like.

    ...

    > the simulation’s likely take-away for the casual viewer with little or no knowledge of dyslexia is that this problem primarily is in the visual domain. From there, it is a short hop to assume that the solutions lie in the same domain.

    ...

    >And those notions can lure families into time- and resource-wasting wild-goose chases pursuing costly, ineffective interventions.

    If you have dyslexia, would you be interested in commenting on these ideas?

    • Do you think dyslexia simulations are dubious?
    • Do you have a preferred way of describing your experience?
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    Photos that feature people with disabilities using common home safety devices.

    In her weekly Better Allies newsletter, Karen Catlin highlights the importance of using stock images featuring people from underrepresented groups.

    She maintains a list of sources for such images, to which she has just added a collection of public domain images from the Consumer Product Safety Commission of the United States federal government.

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    Re-think Infinite Scroll
    theadminbar.com Re-think Infinite Scroll – The Admin Bar

    Infinite scroll is a technique used in websites and applications to provide continuous content loading without explicit pagination or clicking on "next" or "loa

    Re-think Infinite Scroll – The Admin Bar

    Article by @amberhinds@fosstodon.org on the use of infinite scrolling in websites:

    • How it can be difficult for users of screen readers or keyboard input, and for users with cognitive disabilities, attention disorders, or obsessive-compulsive disorders

    • Ways to make it better for assistive technology

    • Pros and cons of using it

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    Books by Helen Keller on Project Gutenberg
    www.gutenberg.org Books by Keller, Helen (sorted by popularity)

    Project Gutenberg offers 71,269 free eBooks for Kindle, iPad, Nook, Android, and iPhone.

    Via Project Gutenberg:

    >Helen Adams Keller was born #OTD in 1880.  She lost her sight and her hearing after a bout of illness when she was 19 months old. She then communicated primarily using home signs until the age of seven, when she met her first teacher and life-long companion Anne Sullivan.

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    Jack Hanna's long goodbye: How Alzheimer's is stripping away the man the world once knew
    www.usatoday.com Jack Hanna's long goodbye: How Alzheimer's is stripping away the man the world once knew

    The once-famed animal advocate Jack Hanna is fading away. His family is speaking publicly for the first time about their fight against Alzheimer's.

    Jack Hanna's long goodbye: How Alzheimer's is stripping away the man the world once knew

    cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/778529

    > >“Where are you from?” Hanna asks between bites. > > > >“Columbus, Ohio,” the family guest says. > > > >Hanna built the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium into one of the nation's best. He then captivated national audiences on David Letterman’s late-night talk show, "Good Morning America" and a number of his own Emmy-winning animal series that still run in syndication. He traveled the globe as a leading animal conservationist promoting Columbus. It was his home for decades. It’s even where he once said he wanted his ashes spread whenever he passes away. > > > >But in this moment, none of that history feels familiar. > > > >Hanna pauses, then asks a question. “Have I ever been to Columbus, Ohio?”

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    Jack Hanna's long goodbye: How Alzheimer's is stripping away the man the world once knew
    www.usatoday.com Jack Hanna's long goodbye: How Alzheimer's is stripping away the man the world once knew

    The once-famed animal advocate Jack Hanna is fading away. His family is speaking publicly for the first time about their fight against Alzheimer's.

    >“Where are you from?” Hanna asks between bites. > >“Columbus, Ohio,” the family guest says. > >Hanna built the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium into one of the nation's best. He then captivated national audiences on David Letterman’s late-night talk show, "Good Morning America" and a number of his own Emmy-winning animal series that still run in syndication. He traveled the globe as a leading animal conservationist promoting Columbus. It was his home for decades. It’s even where he once said he wanted his ashes spread whenever he passes away. > >But in this moment, none of that history feels familiar. > >Hanna pauses, then asks a question. “Have I ever been to Columbus, Ohio?”

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    Jordyn Zimmerman is redefining communication as a nonspeaking advocate for disability rights
    19thnews.org Jordyn Zimmerman is redefining communication as a nonspeaking advocate for disability rights

    Autism Acceptance Month “should be about listening to the various voices that make up our community, disrupting ableism and systems of oppression and calling for action,” she said.

    Jordyn Zimmerman is redefining communication as a nonspeaking advocate for disability rights

    >School was pretty terrible. School is the hub of our communities, and I was segregated within school. So I was therefore segregated from my community. Within school for years, people talked about me like I couldn’t understand them. And even like I didn’t exist. I was easily controlled and manipulated by adults, restrained and secluded and made to complete repetitive tasks with the belief that I didn’t understand them or my surroundings. I was in a perpetual state of discomfort and dysregulation within my own body. There was so much I wanted to say, so much I wanted to add and so much I wanted to change that was all built up in my head.

    (Note: Autism Awareness Month was back in April, but this is still a good article.)

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    ‘May be an image’: what it’s like browsing Instagram while blind
    www.theverge.com ‘May be an image’: what it’s like browsing Instagram while blind

    On social media, the low vision experience is highly erratic

    ‘May be an image’: what it’s like browsing Instagram while blind

    This article is two years old but still relevant to social media in 2023.

    >One of the biggest barriers is the assumption that blind people just won’t be interested in visual media. “Just because they’re visual doesn’t mean that they’re immediately not attractive to people who are blind or low vision,” says McCann. “I think that’s one big misconception: ‘Oh, well, they don’t care about pictures.’ But we do.” When culture is molded on social networks, it sucks to lose out on a shared social language because you can’t see the images everyone is talking about. > >Christy Smith Berman, a low vision editor at Can I Play That, responded to a TT Games tweet that announced the delay of Star Wars Lego with text on an image. When she replied with a request for alt text, Smith Berman was met with responses from people expressing disbelief that blind people would even be on Twitter to begin with, let alone care about video games.

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    dankeck dankeck @beehaw.org

    Web developer and #IAAPCPWA. Digital accessibility, amateur photography, Christianity, 8-bit video games, sci-fi books, pop psychology and cognition. He/him.

    Mastodon: @dankeck@a11y.social

    Posts 23
    Comments 4