Teaching, learning, & creating #A11y for fun&profit. Blind designer, cartographer, researcher, advocate and oyster lover. #MacFellow speaking only for myself.
Still hoping some of my blind Twitter friends can connect me with cool blind / #a11y communities or individuals in Taiwan and Hong Kong. Any suggestions? @BlindUnion@NFB_voice@APHfortheBlind
@SaraSoueidan Among other things, it means everyone can use and enjoy it equally, and no one is lying to anyone else about who is able to use/enjoy it. #A11Y
@blindconfucius@AuroraNebulosa @NefMatOli The plan is to convert the event announcement page into an event documentation page where the Zoom recording and other resources mentioned during the program will be linked. It’s not ready yet, but check back in a few days. https://t.co/MOYIwwJXfa
@walkside3 OKO is very resilient to Camera orientation — allows the pedestrian signal to be anywhere in the field of view making it easy to get feedback even if the pedhead is not centered.
Join us in person or online. Learn about Berkeley‘s blind history and about how blind leaders from Berkeley have shaped the landscape of American and global blindness. Thu, Apr 27, 4:30-6:00 Pacific. https://t.co/Bvl0d6EkFq #a11y
YouDescribe, originally developed at SKERI by Joshua Miele @BerkeleyBlink, is a free, web-based platform for adding audio description to YouTube content. Since 2013, it has built a base of hundreds of volunteer describers and thousands of blind viewers.
https://t.co/9v4SelGb4i
Congrats to River who just had his Eagle Scout Service Project approved and scheduled! River will be leading a group of scouts in creating #AudioDescription with #YouDescribe to help tackle our wishlist. @boyscouts@A11y
Disability inclusion takes place when people with disabilities are “in the room where it happens,” from the classroom to the boardroom, and have the power to guide decisions that impact our community and our ability to participate as equals
@BerkeleyBlink
https://t.co/qRor8gqCEM
“Normalizing disability means changing societal assumptions so that successful people with disabilities, in STEM fields or otherwise, are no longer unusual."
Read blind scientist @BerkeleyBlink’s suggestions on increasing accessibility in STEM: https://t.co/yWzJd9sisn
"I invite us all to re-examine the assumptions we have about disability and success."
Fantastic article from blind scientist, community leader, and inventor @BerkeleyBlink for @TIME on disability representation and tackling ableism in #STEM.
https://t.co/o6981ymMe9
@clifftyll@ppatel@TIME There’s no reason why blind people can’t be absolute experts at tying knots. There’s nothing visual about it. It’s just a matter of engaging with the art in a tactile way and sticking with it.