pam

@pamdrouin
0 Followers
108 Following
53 Posts

UX research + IA

Also into LEGO, trains, film, and table top games

Narrator: How they'd move such monuments remains a mystery forever. ☝️🧐

Ancient Egyptians: These? Pushed them here. 😏

Narrator: Not a trace of how they could have done this. πŸ€·πŸ»β€β™‚οΈ

Ancient Egyptians: Haha. Pushing and pulling. πŸ’ͺ

Narrator: Baffling. 🀯

Ancient Egyptians: 🀨

@VitaVirginiaBot yes to all that
OK #Mastodon. I've seen several toots on #accessibility for #screenreader users, however, I've not seen one from a screenreader user (as far as I know). I've used ZoomText, Outspoken, JAWS (AKA JFW), Supernova, NVDA (Windows), and VoiceOver (both on Macs and iPhone). I don't have experience with Windows Narrator or TalkBack. I would like to rectify and clarify a few small things.
First off, any awareness of accessibility issues, and endeavours to make things more accessible is great. Keep going!
But…
Blind/low-vision people have been using the internet as long as everyone else. We had to become used to the way people share things, and find workarounds or tell developers what we needed; this latter one has been the main drive to get us here and now. Over the past decade, screen readers have improved dramatically, including more tools, languages, and customisability. However, the basics were already firmly in place around 2000. Sadly, screen readers cost a lot of money at that time. Now, many are free; truly the biggest triumph for accessibility IMHO.
So, what you can do to help screen readers help their users is three simple things.
1. Write well: use punctuation, and avoid things like random capitalisation or * halfway through words.
2. Image description: screen readers with image recognition built-in will only provide a very short description, like: a plant, a painting, a person wearing a hat, etc. It can also deal with text included in the image, as long as the text isn't too creatively presented. So, by all means, go absolutely nuts with detail.
3. Hashtags: this is the most commonly boosted topic I've seen here, so #ThisIsWhatAnAccessibleHashtagLooksLike. The capitalisation ensures it's read correctly, and for some long hashtags without caps, I've known screen readers to give up and just start spelling the whole damn thing out, which is slow and painful.
That's really all. Thanks for reading! 😘
@dustynitrate BISEXUAL KIRA

RT @[email protected]

Go into your Twitter settings and disconnect your google account, all the apps that are connected to Twitter, disconnect any credit cards or wallets you might have used from the bird app, delete your precise location, anything that could be hacked.

πŸ¦πŸ”—: https://twitter.com/ihearthestia/status/1590888585825521665

Lorraine on Twitter

β€œGo into your Twitter settings and disconnect your google account, all the apps that are connected to Twitter, disconnect any credit cards or wallets you might have used from the bird app, delete your precise location, anything that could be hacked.”

Twitter

Did you know that if you capitalize each word in a multi-word hashtag, #ScreenReaders can read them as words, but if you leave them lowercase, they can't? Well, now you know! So, for #accessibility, please capitalize words when there's more than one in a hashtag.

#MastodonTip #TwitterMigration

@chronodm I’ll be doing the same! Feels a little daunting but I’m sure it’s not really.
@dylanw 🌞
Hi, it's Pandora! Welcome to my first unboxing video!