Michael Feir

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381 Following
2.1K Posts
Happily married, creative, cheerful, totally blind. Love #technology, #reading, #writing, #accessible games, #podcasts, and much more. Collect modern #audio dramas. Contribute regular segments about audio entertainment on the Kelly and Company show and podcast.
www.ami.ca
Wrote the free ebook Personal Power: Getting The Most From iOS as a Totally Blind user:
http://michaelfeir.blogspot.com/2022/04/the-second-edition-of-personal-power.html?m=1
Created and edited the Audyssey ezine about games accessible to blind people.
@alexhall Oh that's awesome! I have things set to only services and some app subscriptions are shared. That seems to work very well for me, my parents, and my wife.
Apple Vision Accessibility: The 2025 AppleVis Report Card | AppleVis

AppleVis is pleased to unveil our 2025 Apple Vision Accessibility Report Card. The only report of its kind to focus specifically on the needs of people who are blind, DeafBlind, or who have low vision, the Apple Vision Accessibility Report Card provides valuable insights into the lived experiences and opinions of people who rely on VoiceOver, braille, and/or low vision accessibility features on Apple products.

Your brain doesn’t store time equally. It stores novelty.

A week learning something new, meeting people, building something - that week feels long in memory, rich and textured. A month of doomscrolling collapses into almost nothing.

Flow states are paradoxical: time vanishes while you’re in them, but the memory of deep, absorbed work expands retrospectively. Same with meaningful conversations, travel, creative projects.

Subjective life isn’t measured in years, but in distinct memories.

2/3

Strap in, kids, this is my hot take on AI. I want to start out by saying that I didn't use any sort of artificial help when I wrote this. This is all me and it's going to be long so grab a coffee. As most of my friends know, I have a love-hate relationship with AI, and said relationship influences my thoughts on it; a lot, so let's break it down. First, the hate. I'm still salty about being replaced by an AI audio editing service and losing a steady gig, even though I understand why I was phased out. From a financial standpoint, it made sense to replace me. Why pay me $100 per podcast episode when an AI can do my work for $15 a month. I know I can do better, but I also get that it's hard out here. I hate the fact I was so easily replaced, and I hate the fact that people are using AI irresponsibly and that everywhere I turn it's being shoved in my face like some sort of religion. I hate the fact AI is being asked for medical advice. It's googling your symptoms all over again just worse and good god why. I hate that people who might not be as in the know about technology as I am are being fooled by it. I hate that my facebook feed is crammed full of these AI stories that quite frankly make me want to vomit because there's only so much feel good recycled bullshit I can take, and people are feeding into that, too. I hate that my browser even uses AI and I have to sift through a lot to find a simple answer to a question. I despise ai-written articles. I hate the influx of AI-generated music that features in my spotify discovery weekly and release radar playlists. I said in a post a bit ago that yes, some of it is cool, but most of it is actual garbage. I hate that my PC might soon be AI-driven. No thank you. Get out of here with that mess. Now for the love, because there is some. I love that I can use AI to get an idea about pictures and videos of my almost 1-year-old son from his dads. I know that AI can be wrong, so I use resources, like his dads in this example to tell me if my descriptions are wrong, or if there's any detail that the AI might have missed. I am very aware that not everybody has resources like that, but I do, and I am grateful for them. I love that I can use AI to read the text of something like a card. I shared a story a while back about how I was with my brother at his friend's place and we played a game called mixtape, where you have cards with different scenarios on them that you have to pick songs to fit. Think apples to apples for music lovers like me. Rather than my brother or anyone else reading my cards for me, I was able to do it myself. I of course asked if I got the correct info because again, AI can be wrong, but for the most part in this case it wasn't. That was liberating and I had a great time playing that night. I love that I can use AI to help me get my thoughts together if I'm writing something out. With careful prompting, I can have a model ask me questions about the topic I want to write about and prompt me for my thoughts, then generate something after all my thoughts are down on the virtual paper. Once generated, I take what it gives me then fix it to match the way I write and correct any errors I find because I fact check everything. I *do not* let AI write something for me and call it mine. I'm fair at writing and I take pride in that and I'll be damned if I'll let an AI model take that away from me, but I do recognize when my thoughts are disjointed and when I just need prompts and questions to get me on track. It's a tool, friends, nothing more. I love that people are using AI as a tool to make more mainstream games accessible. I don't love that some folk don't check the AI's output, but if you do and you have the knowledge to fix issues with code then I think you're doing it right and I applaud you. It's not just games where accessibility with AI is a thing, either. Let's be real, the world is not made for folk like me or anyone with a disability, really, so if AI can assist in making something accessible? great. Again, using it as a tool is fantastic and I have no issue with that, and that extends to things like music and the process of composing and making a track. I think it's fine to take and have something like suno generate a track and then you as the musician build your own track around what you got given by the AI. Make it your own. I don't have a problem if you're just using suno for your own entertainment, go for it, be free, but if you're going to put something on a streaming service? Find some way to make it your own because let's be real, there is something clinical about AI-generated music even though some tracks are cool. I'm all for tools in your toolbox, but like anything else, if you're not being responsible about how you use said tools that's where things get dicy. AI is here to stay whether we like it or not, but it's up to us how we use it, and if you don't? That's fine too. There's a fine line and some folk might choose to step over it and some might not, and it's okay. Be aware of the risks, and remember that it's artificial intelligence. It's not a substitute, but it can be a tool. If you read through all of this I would love to know your thoughts. Have a good Monday, yall.
Really enjoyed this presentation from the Computer History Museum. I'm also enjoying David Pogue's book celebrating fifty years of Apple. Here's the link to the presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?si=HWlA66b-fo7JRtb8&v=eCSNJgI2LFI&feature=youtu.be
CHM Live | Apple at 50: Five Decades of Thinking Different

YouTube
@lulu_bear Hope you continue to get better. There are some accessibility options on iPhones which are supposed to help with situations where one hand is available. There's a one-handed keyboard option in accesibility settings. Also, there's Voice Control. It can work with VoiceOver but it's clunky and you should use earbuds so Voice Control doesn't get confused with VoiceOver's output. Hope you're finding things to enjoy while you recover.
@macrumors @kevinrj I'm just a couple of hours into the book but it's been great so far. Well worth the Audible credit for anybody whose life has been as influenced by their products as I have by the iPhone and, a long time ago, an Apple II E.
@NightDrake @silly_singer That's correct. It would start attempting to learn your habits if you didn't have a charging limit set. You should find what works best for your particular lifestyle. You might have circumstances when you need to charge up to 100% like before a particularly busy day. You can turn off the charging limit for a day so that it automatically kicks in again the next day.
@StaceyCornelius I just had some direct experience with that filling out a police background check authroization form. I spent a good hour going through the form convinced I must have missed a checkbox. After church on Sunday, my pastor offered to come and help. He was able to check the inaccessible undetectable checkboxes in the otherwise totally accessible slightly confusing form. At least one other blind volunteer had the same difficulty.
Battery management has goten way better now so you don't have to worry about having batteries expand. (3/3)
@NightDrake @silly_singer