Final Rule on Website Accessibility Will Mean Greater Access to State and Local Governments
We at AFB are thrilled that the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) published its final rule on website and mobile application accessibility this week. This rule is the culmination of decades of advocacy and rulemaking and marks a significant step in ensuring that the digital environment is fully accessible to people who are blind, have low vision, or are deafblind.
Getting this rule on the books has been one of AFB’s top policy priorities over the past several years, and in October 2023 we…
Blog Topics
Accessibility, Technology, Americans with Disabilities Act, Public Policy
Interconnected content with AccessWorld
As part of our refocusing of AccessWorld in the spring of 2023, we have expanded AccessWorld beyond the magazine format. If you are not familiar with the changes that have come to the AccessWorld publication itself, we have now expanded AccessWorld to focus more directly on digital inclusion. This means that we now include content of interest to web and software developers, employers, and other changemakers in the digital inclusion space.
With this change, we have also expanded into new spaces…
Highlights from the 2024 CSUN Assistive Technology Conference
Editor's Note: Each year, AccessWorld writers who attend the CSUN Assistive Technology Conference detail the most cutting edge or noteworthy pieces of technology they encounter. This year, Judy Dixon brings us details on new developments in mobility technology, AI Vision, and braille displays.
Gliding along Safely with Glide: A Revolutionary Mobility Assistant
One of the most crowded and talked about booths in the exhibit hall at CSUN this
year was Glidance. This new startup founded by blind…
Blog Topics
Conference Recaps, Accessibility
Create Helpful Image Descriptions with the W3C's Alt Text Decision Tree
When making digital technology accessible for people using screen readers, the implementation may be of varying levels of complexity, but the task is, in most situations, relatively straightforward: "Is this element labeled and viewable to the screen reader or not?" When we discuss accessibility, we generally are referring to websites, but this holds true for the vast majority of other modern digital interfaces including apps, desktop software, even operating system UIs. Images tend to be a…
Blog Topics
Accessibility
Spring Letter of Appeal
“Tomorrow! What possibilities are in that word.”
- Helen Keller
Give Today
Dear Friend,
Dreams do come true – and thanks to your support, we’ve been able to turn many of our dreams into reality in recent years. Tomorrow presents plenty of possibilities, and you can help us maximize them. At the American Foundation for the Blind, we’re ready to take on what’s next, and your continued support will bolster our efforts.
The world is changing fast, and AFB is always working to address…
Why Join a Digital Accessibility Program?
As time passes, technology becomes more commonplace and increasingly crucial for most aspects of life, be it work, school, or leisure. As we integrate and evolve with digital spaces, equal access to technology and digital resources is essential for people with disabilities to ensure they can fully participate and engage with the world. That is our mission– to create a world of endless possibilities for people who are blind or have low vision.
To make that possible, we need to provide our…
Blog Topics
Talent Lab Tech Notes, Accessibility
Low Vision Awareness: A Survey of Useful Tools for the Newcomer to Low Vision
Low vision awareness is about recognizing the diversity of vision we might find in our community or workplace. Blindness and low vision are not visual conditions that are either on or off. Low vision affects people in different ways, so it might be that someone with low vision has less peripheral vision, like looking down a cardboard tube, which can be caused by glaucoma, or it might be a very soft focus in the center of the visual field that can't be corrected. Imagine, for example, a smudge…
Blog Topics
Low Vision, Accessibility, Technology
GPT-4 Image Recognition: An Absolute Game Changer in Accessibility
Accessibility is always improving, but 2023 saw one of the most significant accessibility breakthroughs since the advent of the accessible smartphone. GPT4, produced by Open AI, is a Large Language Model (LLM) that can accept both text and images. In summary, you can converse with an LLM much like you would with a person, and it will respond in a manner closely approximating human interaction. Also, the most powerful LLMs such as Open AI's GPT and Google's Bard, perform various tasks only…
Blog Topics
Accessibility
Spotlighting Breakthroughs in Multi-line Braille Displays
One of the most exciting developments in refreshable
braille display technology is the creation of market-viable multi-line
braille displays. While single-line braille displays have been in
production for many decades, multi-line displays have only become
widely available in the past half-decade or so. Currently, several
multi-line displays are available or soon to be released.
In this piece, I want to highlight three such displays: the Orbit
Slate, the Canute 360, and the Monarch.
Orbit…
Blog Topics
Braille, Accessibility
Conjury, A Showcase on Game Accessibility Using the Unity Accessibility Plugin
Just after I published this piece on game accessibility in the fall issue of AccessWorld, a game was brought to my notice that used one of the access methods I discussed in that piece. The game is called Conjury, and uses the Unity Accessibility Plugin to provide access to the user interface (UI) for people who use screen readers. The game is a turn based card game, meaning that by making the UI accessible, the game itself is entirely playable. I was excited to bring information on this game to…
Blog Topics
Accessibility