dankeck

joined 2 years ago
 

How do you write alternate text for a work with visual artistic merit?

  • How you balance too many words versus sufficient details?
  • What details should come first?
  • How do you account for different audiences, their needs and preferences?
  • Should it be written by the original artist or a professional describer?

In a recent IAAP webinar, inclusive media expert Joanne Pak explained an initiative to answer these questions and more.

The Literary Image Description (LID) Best Practices Guide is a Canadian government-funded project aiming to:

offer a more vivid and engaging approach to writing image descriptions in an effort to make art and literature more accessible to all readers everywhere.

Visit the project website to download a well-researched and illustrated guide in EPUB or PDF. Then maybe next time you see a painting, sculpture, comic strip, or even clever set of visual instructions, you can take a swing at making your own image description*!

*But of course, don't publish unless you first talk to the author or do sufficient research into the intent!

 

This Tuesday, 2023-10-24: Women Who Code Advocacy Town Hall moderated by AmyJune Hineline ( @volkswagenchick@drupal.community )

From the event description:

  • Hiring Process, Getting the Job, and Support at Work: Know the challenges and opportunities for individuals with disabilities throughout the hiring process, workplace support, and career growth.

  • Visible and Invisible Disabilities: Understand and define visible and invisible disabilities, and how they affect individuals in the tech industry.

Legal Rights and Responsibilities: Learn about legal rights and responsibilities in hiring practices and actionable ways to advocate for yourself and others.

  • How Allies Can Be Advocates: Explore how allies can play a role in advocating for individuals with disabilities and creating inclusive workplaces, and how technologists can develop with accessibility in mind.

  • Access to Resources: Gain insights into accessibility resources and how you can find more support

 

Shared by @onsman@aus.social, a list of experts and organizations to follow for news and ideas on digital accessibility.

[–] dankeck@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks for sharing. I asked this question elsewhere, and no one else has trouble with Zoom chat. Everything I hear is along the lines of this response at rblind: that Zoom makes it easy for all users to show or hide the chat as needed.

Maybe you're right about guidelines and moderation. At the very least, maybe it would be good to add a statement to the accessibility talk at the beginning of the meeting. Like:

  • Tell people how to enable captions.
  • Tell people how to download presentation files to view at their own speed.
  • And also tell people how to turn off the chat if it is too distracting.
[–] dankeck@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

Thanks for sharing. It sounds like all the technology is in place for people to use or hide the chat as needed.

 

Employees of the state of Minnesota in the United States have created a "Maps Community of Practice" to advance the accessibility of digital and print maps.

 

cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/7716703

Earlier this month I logged on to a Zoom webinar that had chat enabled. The meeting had a large attendance. The chat quickly filled up with dozens of people sharing their city or country, and later commenting on technical problems.

Some screen reader users had a difficult experience due to the heavy use of the chat. Here are three bits of feedback:

A comment reading "All this chatting is very disruptive to those of us using screen readers"

A question reading "Can people please stop messing up the chat? The preview is distracting."

A comment reading "The fact that so many of you type in the chat while the presentation is underway shows how few of you use screen readers."

What is your opinion on this aspect of videoconference chat etiquette? I'm not talking about offensive or dangerous content--just the volume of content.

  • Should frivolous chat messages be avoided, so that screen reader users don't miss important chat messages?
  • Or is important that chat can be a chaotic free-for-all, to get the full Zoom experience?
  • Does anyone have personal experience with this?
  • Does anyone have a preferred etiquette guide that covers this?

Thumbnail image is an illustration of over a dozen empty word balloons, overlaid on each other in a chaotic mess. Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

 

This week I logged on to a Zoom webinar that had chat enabled. The meeting had a large attendance. The chat quickly filled up with dozens of people sharing their city or country, and later commenting on technical problems.

Some screen reader users had a difficult experience due to the heavy use of the chat. Here are three bits of feedback:

A comment reading "All this chatting is very disruptive to those of us using screen readers"

A question reading "Can people please stop messing up the chat? The preview is distracting."

A comment reading "The fact that so many of you type in the chat while the presentation is underway shows how few of you use screen readers."

What is your opinion on this aspect of videoconference chat etiquette? I'm not talking about offensive or dangerous content--just the volume of content.

  • Should frivolous chat messages be avoided, so that screen reader users don't miss important chat messages?
  • Or is important that chat can be a chaotic free-for-all, to get the full Zoom experience?
  • Does anyone have personal experience with this?
  • Does anyone have a preferred etiquette guide that covers this?

Thumbnail image is an illustration of over a dozen empty word balloons, overlaid on each other in a chaotic mess. Image by Gerd Altmann from Pixabay

 

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

 

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.

 

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.

 

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.

 

Follow the creator at @dukope@mastodon social

[–] dankeck@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

Now if Spotify would finally add a light mode.

[–] dankeck@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I edited my post and added a link to the font.

[–] dankeck@beehaw.org 18 points 1 year ago

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.

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