Braille is literacy.
Many people think it can be substituted by speech synthesis, by audiobooks, by other things. It can't.
Voice is serial, it unfolds in time. It requires working memory. Braille is static. It unfolds in space, remains stable in time. It backs working memory, does not consume it. For things that require pinning down relationships (mathematics, music, programming) braile has clear advantages.
This is not to say people can't manage without it. I don't always use a braille display. But it makes things better: learning, accuracy, performance, speed.
Witholding braille from blind people is withholding literacy, it's denying capacity.
Don't fucking do that.
reshared this
Despite numerous predictions by a few professionals in the education field of its imminent demise as technology has evolved, the Braille code is an ingenious system that has kept pace with technological change. From computerized embossing, to refreshable Braille displays, to the exciting new world of multiline devices, Braille is as vibrant and relevant as ever.
But for me, reflecting on World Braille Day which we celebrate on the anniversary of Louis Braille's birth, is also about celebrating Braille the man. He taught us that we, the blind, are uniquely placed to devise solutions that move us forward. His story teaches us that sometimes, we will face stiff opposition from vested interests who are challenged and threatened. In Louis Braille's case, he even endured the heartbreak of seeing books in his code burned. But he gave us hope that when people temporarily stand in the path of progress, the evidence will be so overwhelming that progress will prevail.
It is critical that all of us, but particularly young blind people, are taught that Braille the code was devised by Braille, a blind man. That is why it is right and respectful that when we refer to the code, we should always do so with a capital B, just as we do for Morse code, Celsius, Fahrenheit and other codes.
In 2024, marking the 200th anniversary of the invention of the Braille code, it was my great honor to deliver the keynote address to the International Council on English Braille. I provide a link to the text and audio of that address, which traces the history of the code, the opposition it has faced over the years, and the blind people who have safeguarded his legacy. It is now our turn to safeguard that legacy and invest the inheritance left to us by Louis Braille.
mosen.org/iceb2024/
My Address to the 2024 General Assembly of the International Council on English Braille
This year marks the 200th anniversary of the invention of the Braille code. The International Council on English Braille, which has a General Assembly every four years, met this time in Auckland, N…Mosen At Large
#LouisBraille
#France
#Braille
#ReplicaBuildings
reshared this
Jak na blokování reklamy a rodičovskou kontrolu ve vlastní režii? AdGuard Home je na to výborné řešení. Používám ho už půl roku a v článku jsem se podělil o praktické zkušenosti z instalace a provozu, popsal jeho nejdůležitější vlastnosti a taky se trochu věnoval srovnání se známějším Pi-hole.
#Adguard #AdguardHome #blokování #Pihole #reklama #soukromíblog.eischmann.cz/2026/01/04/a…(reakce na tento příspěvek se může zobrazit jako komentář pod článkem)
RE: mastodon.stickbear.me/@Lynn/11…
Hail to #Braille, both the inventor and the script! :)
Lynn I 🗽 📚 (@Lynn@mastodon.stickbear.me)
Happy World Braille Day, 2026. Braille literacy has been and always will be fundamental to me. I read it and write it, daily! It enriches my life in countless ways.The Bear's den
Tip: if you have multiple #Audible accounts, you can switch between them in the iOS app and play all downloaded titles regardless of which account it's currently signed into.
For example if your main account is with the US marketplace but you've purchased some titles on the UK site, you can switch to the UK account, download those titles, and then switch back to your main US login. The UK titles will still be playable under the Library tab alongside your US ones.
Welcome to the RB family, APlayer 🥳
apt.izzysoft.de/packages/remix…
APlayer is a beautiful and powerful music player with lyrics support, a built-in equalizer, sleep timer, tag editor, and more.
Thanks to some help by its developer, this app can now be built reproducible 
#ReproducibleBuilds #IzzyOnDroid
„APlayer“ – IzzyOnDroid F-Droid Repository
A beautiful and powerful music playerIzzyOnDroid Repo Browser
Lately on the blog: How about a Markdown Web?
brettterpstra.com/2026/01/02/h…
How about a Markdown Web? - BrettTerpstra.com
I often come up with ideas in the hazy half-dream state before I wake up. Recently I was thinking about exactly how shitty the web has become. And also about how much I love plain text formats like…BrettTerpstra.com
How to Permanently Delete Your LinkedIn Account: Step-by-Step Guide
Learn how to permanently delete your LinkedIn account in just a few clicks and remove all your data for good. Follow our step-by-step guide today!Bhargav Patel (LinkedFusion)
@su_liam @mort Another one is a textbook I've got which contains URLs for additional online study material.
Which doesn't exist.
I emailed the author and he said that the original publisher sold the label to another publisher, who carried on selling the stock of books containing the URL, and then the original publisher simply deleted the web site.
Thinking about forgiveness lately and wondering if it's such a good thing. If we forgive bad people (certain politicians, CEOs, misogynists, racists, criminals, etc.) while they refuse to change, where does that get us? OTOH if we use e.g. ostracism as a tool, does that improve the problematic thoughts & behaviour, or entrench it? In other words, how do we best convince people to be less rubbish?
Any resources would be appreciated, whether regarding individuals or societies.
#BoostsWelcome
Q: What's an #Apple executive's least favourite type of washing machine?
A: A sideloader.
reshared this
Contre #Trump on voit bien l’impact limité des #rassemblements et #manifestations… Il est temps de boycotter sérieusement les produits US :
🔸 #CocaCola, #MacDonald : c'est pas un gros effort, ça nous manquera pas !
🔸 #Apple, #Microsoft : go #Linux !
🔸 #Google : degooglisons-internet.org avec l'aide de @Framasoft
🔸 #Whatsapp : go #Matrix !
... liste à compléter ...
#boycott #BoycottUSA #impérialisme #Venezuela #Palestine #BDS
Dégooglisons Internet - Accueil
Les géants du web centralisent nos vies numériques en échange de leurs services Les communautés du logiciel libre offrent des services alternatifs éthiques Le réseau Framasoft souhaite le démontreren les hébergeantdegooglisons-internet.org
GitHub - GodsScion/Auto_job_applier_linkedIn: Make your job hunt easy by automating your application process with this Auto Applier
Make your job hunt easy by automating your application process with this Auto Applier - GodsScion/Auto_job_applier_linkedInGitHub
Can screen readers translate alt text? Text in general? If not, do they at least read the language correctly?
Sight reading, I can pick my way through a lot of not-English; German, Spanish, even a bit of Russian, and from that I can puzzle out a bit of related languages.
Does that work with a screen reader? Or does it read out the eg. German text with English phonetics and make a total hash of it?
wcurl vs Wget
daniel.haxx.se/docs/wcurl-vs-w…
wcurl vs Wget
Documentation and ramblings of Daniel Stenberg, founder and lead developer of curl.daniel.haxx.se
johann reshared this.
@jakobrosin Yep, it works well.
BTW, I am currently writing to you using Tweesecake from my phone. How cute.
Release v6: bugfix in automatic language switching · fastfinge/eloquence_64
This is just a bugfix release to ensure Auto Language switching works for languages with dialects. Previously, NVDA could not switch to using any language with a dialect during auto language switch...GitHub
johann reshared this.
I'd love a software-based doubletalk, but ... well. not making too much progress. This is the raw audio data and that's about as far as I've gotten.
johann reshared this.
The Curious Case of the Shallow Session SPAs
calendar.perfplanet.com/2025/t…
The Curious Case of the Shallow Session SPAs
Buried at the end of this year's installment of my semi-annual series on network and device reality is a mystery: multiple, independent data sets from the Web Performance community indicate sites built as Single-Page Applications ("SPAs") receive, on…Web Performance Calendar
I picked up a Keychron K10 Max from Amazon and got it yesterday, and I don't think I ever want to go back to a membrane keyboard again.
For context: before this, I was using a Logitech Ergo K860. It's a split, membrane keyboard that a lot of people like for ergonomics, and it did help in some ways — but for me, it was also limiting. My hands don't stay neatly parked in one position, and the enforced split often worked against how I naturally move. It also wasn't rechargeable, and the large built-in wrist rest (which I know some people love) mostly became a dirt-collecting obstacle that I had to work around.
Another big factor for me is that I often work from bed. That means my keyboard isn't sitting on a perfectly stable desk. It's on a tray, my lap, or bedding that shifts as I move.
The Logitech Ergo K860 is very light, which sounds nice on paper, but in practice it meant the keyboard was easy to knock around, slide out of position, or tilt unexpectedly. Combined with the split layout, that meant I was constantly re-orienting myself instead of just typing.
The Keychron, by contrast, is noticeably heavier — and that turns out to be a feature. It stays put. It doesn’t drift when my hands move. It feels planted in a way that reduces both physical effort and mental overhead. I don't have to think about where the keyboard is; I can just use it.
For a bed-based workflow, that stability matters more than I realized.
With chronic pain, hand fatigue, and accessibility needs, keyboards are not a neutral tool. They shape how long I can work, how accurately I can type, and how much energy I spend compensating instead of thinking.
This new keyboard feels solid, responsive, and predictable in a way I didn't realize I was missing. The keys register cleanly without requiring force, and the feedback is clear without being harsh. I'm not fighting the keyboard anymore. It's just doing what I ask.
What surprised me even more is how much better the software side feels from an accessibility perspective. Keychron's Launcher and its use of QMK are far more usable for me than Logitech Options Plus ever was. Being able to work with something that’s web-based, text-oriented, and closer to open standards makes a huge difference as a screen reader user. I can reason about what the keyboard is doing instead of wrestling with a visually dense, mouse-centric interface.
That matters a lot. When your primary interface to the computer is the keyboard, both the hardware and the configuration tools need to cooperate with you.
I know mechanical keyboards aren't new, but this is my first one, and I finally understand why people say they'll never go back. For me, this isn't about aesthetics or trends. It's about having a tool that respects my body and my access needs and lets me focus on the work itself.
I'm really grateful I was able to get this, and I'm genuinely excited to keep dialing it in. Sometimes the right piece of hardware, paired with software that doesn’t fight you, doesn’t just improve comfort. It quietly expands what feels possible.
#Accessibility #DisabledTech #AssistiveTechnology
#ScreenReader #NVDA
#MechanicalKeyboards #Keychron
@accessibility @disability @spoonies @mastoblind
To celebrate the first official Digital Independence Day - with some help of other #opensource enthusiasts - we convinced someone from my family:
✅ to install #Linux on their Mac computer,
✅ created a #Mastodon account for them,
✅ and assisted them in the transition.
It worked out!
Thank you to the anonymous supporter! ;)
#unplugtrump #didit #diday #dutgemacht #foss
Zechy
in reply to Archos • • •Archos
in reply to Zechy • • •Ale mně myslím stačí maximálně společné vyjížďky
Zechy
in reply to Archos • • •Archos
in reply to Zechy • • •