Apple Releases iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4; Bringing Enhancements to VoiceOver and Braille applevis.com/blog/apple-releas…

Discovered that #libadwaita apps can enable the convenience "What's New" button in their About dialog to show release notes: gnome.pages.gitlab.gnome.org/l…

Some #GNOME apps already use it: stable releases of Calendar, Shortwave, Showtime, Papers, System Monitor, Decibels, Warp, etc.

I've now filed RFEs for this in Tuba, Epiphany, Contacts, Fractal, Secrets, Warehouse, Maps, Apostrophe, Snapshot, File Roller, etc.

Ideally I'd want to suggest it in Ptyxis, Text Editor, Builder, Loupe & Pika…

in reply to Maksym Hazevych

@mks_h I think it's fine to request features, but reporting something like this and pointing at all of the other apps in the issue gives the impression that you're:

a) Implying there's some deficiency in the app when in reality it's just a minor difference.
b) You're trying to pressure them into adding it in order to be in line with other apps.

That may not be the intention, but that's how it comes across to others. Speaking as an app developer, it doesn't feel nice to be pressured into more work when you're barely keeping up with what you already want to do.

in reply to Chris 🌱

@brainblasted @mks_h Oh, I see your point now about the apps list. For the record, I didn't mean it as pressure, but as reference implementations that can be used as examples / tried out for comparison.

From my own experience with Calendar it wasn't clear why I wasn't seeing it there; therefore I took great care in testing each app on the list to be *sure* whether it did or did not have the feature in practice (with stable versions), I didn't want to mistakenly report if they already had it.

If you want to listen to some guy demo Siri and talk about TTS for four minutes and eleven seconds, here you go lmao.

I talk about Siri's new TTS improvements in iOS 18.4, and try unsuccessfully to get info about places in California. Amazingly, I have much better luck with getting answers about machine learning and what it's used for. What a time to be alive, or something.

Unknown parent

mastodon - Link to source

Zach Bennoui

@Peiress Oh yeah I know what you're talking about. Wonder if the voice actor who recorded the data for this is precluded from doing any more work because her voice would be recognizable now. I haven't heard her on anything other than Siri and Apple adjacent things. Funnily enough, I did hear the VO artist who did Siri's TTS when iOS 7 was released in a AAA commercial.
@Eigh

So, we did a thing.

github.com/systemd/systemd/pul…

#systemd #golang #go #rust

This entry was edited (8 months ago)

Have any of you used Codeberg static pages for your developer blog or for your Open Source project's homepage? :codeberg:

I would love to hear about some experiences or see your Git repositories. 🙂

codeberg.page/

CC @Codeberg @forgejo

#Codeberg #Forjeo #Git #Page #OpenSource #FreeSoftware

This entry was edited (8 months ago)

[Blog Post] Apple Releases iOS 18.4 and iPadOS 18.4; Bringing Enhancements to VoiceOver and Braille applevis.com/blog/apple-releas…

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Qualcomm's 6G blueprint—Evolving the network, revolutionizing the experience
"...Where 5G relied heavily on simulation and statistical modeling, 6G will be built and optimized using real-time, high-fidelity digital twins. Qualcomm’s vision involves creating precise, 3D models of the network and physical environment—tools that go far beyond planning exercises to become part of the network’s operational fabric. "
rcrwireless.com/20250331/6g/qu…

ich soll eine #Managed #nextcloud von #ionos zu #Hostsharing migrieren.
jetzt im Ernst? ionos.de/hilfe/datenschutz/ser…
"Beachten Sie, dass die Datenbank bei Managed Nextcloud-Installationen nicht exportiert werden kann."
Wenn ich wenigstens die App User Migration installieren könnte, aber die ist nicht in der Liste der zugelassenen Apps.
bei #ossaas und bei #hostsharing gehören dir deine Daten wirklich, du kannst alle Apps installieren, und du kannst damit hingehen wo du willst!

This year's WebAIM Million is out! webaim.org/projects/million/

10% less detectable errors (fwiw), 7% more complexity in homepages.

A lot less errors at government, banks, non profits, many more in fashion, sports and ecommerce.

To fix the common issues, see (or send colleagues to) my two blog posts: hidde.blog/common-a11y-issues/ and hidde.blog/more-common-a11y-is…

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in reply to Taggart

Oh, it's less about me accidentally using it to log in. But you're correct: as my GPG key, the SSH key should have a proper passphrase set – so even if someone "finds" the private key, it would be useless to them 🤷‍♂️ Guess I've let myself be carried-away a little by that article. But Brian has a point there: not being configured for auth makes it not usable for auth. Well, the term "military grade" was "signaled" out recently I've heard 🙊 💨

There's a new product that has been gaining some buzz in the blind community, a Windows app called Guide that uses AI to perform tasks on your computer. It's pitched as a way to get around web accessibility problems in particular. I won't link to the thing itself, because I don't want to give it that validation, but I'll link to a previous discussion thread about it: fed.interfree.ca/notes/a5wf4ys…

I've spent some time taking this app apart. The level of shoddy work here is deeply disgusting. 1/?


Final update: The developer is now on Mastodon via @andrew_guide.

Update: The developer has removed the ability to download Guide until the security issues mentioned in the linked thread are fixed.

Update: this product contains some code flaws that are concerning from a security perspective, beyond just giving control of your computer to an LLM. You might want to read this thread before installing the product: toot.cafe/@matt/114258349401221651

Update: I've exchanged some long emails with Andrew, the lead developer. He's open to dialogue, and moving the project in the right direction: well-scoped single tasks, more granular controls and permissions, etc. He doesn't strike me as an #AI maximalist can and should do everything all the time kind of guy. He's also investigating deeper screen reader interaction, to let AI just do the things we can't do that it's best at. I stand by my thoughts that the project isn't yet ready for prime time. But as someone else in the thread said, I don't think it should be written off entirely as yet another "AI will save us from inaccessibility" hype train. There is, in fact, something here if it gets polished and scoped a bit more.

Just tried guide for fun. It's supposed to be an app to use #AI to help #blind folks get things done. I asked "Where are the best liver and onions in Ottawa?" It:
1. Decided it needed to search the web.
2. Thought that the "stardew access" icon on my desktop was a kind of web browser, so clicked it.
3. Imagined an "accept cookies" dialogue it needed to accept.
4. Decided that didn't work, so looked for Google Chrome (I don't have chrome installed on that machine)
5. Finally opened edge from the start menu. By the way, it just...left Stardew open and running. Because apparently having Stardew Valley running in the background is a vital part of finding liver and onions in Ottawa.
6. Opened a random extension from my edge toolbar (goodlinks).
7. Clicked the address bar and loaded google.com, instead of just doing the search right from the address bar.
8. Got blocked because it couldn't sign into my Google account, even though it could have also searched from the Google homepage.

To be fair to AI, that was the kind of open-ended task AI is terrible at. If I had asked it to check an inaccessible checkbox, or read a screenshot, or something, I'm sure it would have been fine.

Anyway, I'm still better at using a computer than an AI. So is my 87 year old grandfather, for that matter. www.guideinteraction.com


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in reply to Matt Campbell

What do you think of VOCR and TypeAhead? They seem like much better implementations of a similar concept. VOCR uses OCR and other (non-LLM) techniques to make an inaccessible application navigable, using its own commands to move between and activate controls. In my experience its definitely better than screen recognition on iOS. You can use an LLM to ask questions about an image or about the screen, or you can have an LLM divide the screen into areas and describe them separately, but these are just additional features. TypeAhead can use an LLM to move the VoiceOver focus to a specific element, no matter where it is in the application, and it can also directly perform tasks on your computer. However, for multi-step tasks, it always says what it is doing before it does it, and you can cancel it if it starts doing something you don't want. There are privacy concerns, because it uses GPT 3.5 or GPT 4, so I wish it supported ollama or lmstudio, but overall I like it. You can also record your own macros and tell it to execute them. It has a free plan, with GPT 3.5, and a $15 a month plan with GPT 4. Both of these applications only support MacOS currently though.
in reply to Matt Campbell

Hey Matt, developer of Guide here. Thanks for taking the time to dive deep into Guide and share your analysis. You're right to call out the security issues. Right now, my main priority is tightening security, particularly around restricting local server connections, and I've temporarily pulled download links until these fixes are fully implemented. Expect an update in the next few days addressing this specifically.

J'ai installé la dernière version de @thunderbird (la version 136.0, canal release). Le module conversations a été désactivé car il n'est pas encore mis à jour... 😭 addons.thunderbird.net/fr/thun…

#thunderbird136

in reply to Cy-real ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ ⏚

Sorry you encountered this - we have instructions on how to safely go back to 128 so you can have Conversations working again: blog.thunderbird.net/2025/03/t…

🏛️"Demos, not memos" is one of our mantras for #FWD50 2025.

On April 15, we're diving deep into Product Management for government, featuring alumni from #18F sharing what might have been.

Learn how product thinking yields incredible results in public service.

Register now: access.fwd50.com/feed

#ProductManagement #PublicSector #DigitalServices

This entry was edited (8 months ago)

Zeman: Do lahví pro prezidenty jsme přelévali slivovici, co nám zbyla
Že by prázdná lahev na slivovici mohla stát tři tisíce korun, nechtěl uvěřit ani známý lihovarník Martin Žufánek. „To by musela být ručně foukaná někde v Moseru,“ uvedl.
:02_laugh:
seznamzpravy.cz/clanek/domaci-…