From a selfish #accessibility viewpoint, things I would like to stop existing:
Discord.
PDFs.
statista.com
Powerpoint/Impress.
What are your "my life would be better if abled users didn't inexplicably choose X" preferences?
Boosts welcome, replies more so.
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Sven Slootweg
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Sven Slootweg • • •Sven Slootweg
in reply to modulux • • •Sensitive content
Yep, that's pretty much the kind of issue I suspected, though in more detail than I knew of - thanks!
This is probably caused by PDFs being more vector images (with exact letter positioning) than text documents... which is unfortunately also exactly why people love using them, because they automatically match pixel-perfectly whatever the generating app would display natively :(
I've been thinking off-and-on for a while about how the format could be improved to fix these issues, but so far I've not gotten any further than "include a semantic and a visual version separately"...
modulux
in reply to Sven Slootweg • • •Yeah, I get why people want it--having a static, fixed visual representation of a document is nice--but it can make life annoying for me all too often. The highest accessibility extensions to pdf (PDF/UA or PDF/A) tend to make things a little better, though by no means perfect either.
I think part of the problem is there's nothing that fulfils having visual invariance and being semantic at once. Even something like epub is too complicated because it's html-based and that's too universal, can link to foreign resources and so on.
James Scholes
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to James Scholes • • •Wil James
in reply to modulux • • •Andre Louis
in reply to James Scholes • • •Touch-screen-only machines in train stations/restaurants. Notice I said touch-screen-only, not just touch-screen period. I get why they exist.
H-CAPTCHA. CAPTCHA that cannot be solved either via audio, or text.
Inaccessible combo and list boxes... What the? Why do they need to exist?
modulux
in reply to Andre Louis • • •Florian
in reply to Andre Louis • • •Mikołaj Hołysz
in reply to Florian • • •Jonathan
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Jonathan • • •Jonathan
in reply to modulux • • •I get that its anoying on phones, I agree, but on the PC, I'm actually pretty satesfied.
modulux
in reply to Jonathan • • •Jonathan
in reply to modulux • • •If I press this, I get:
stable 325182 (6e34e46) Host 1.0.9162 x64 (51902) Build Override: N/A Windows 11 64-bit (10.0.22631)
You see, 64bit. I think in the old one it said something else.
I don't know if thats the cause, but you can at least try to check that.
modulux
in reply to Jonathan • • •Jonathan
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Jonathan • • •Marc
in reply to modulux • • •On my desktop it really runs fine but guess what, even it's fans go louder down there even though you can't feel the pc slowing it down.
modulux
in reply to Marc • • •Robert Kingett backup
in reply to Jonathan • • •Jonathan
in reply to Robert Kingett backup • • •modulux
in reply to Jonathan • • •Mikołaj Hołysz
in reply to modulux • • •modulux reshared this.
modulux
in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz • • •Good ones. Curious about a few if you care to add: what's the good alternative to Kindle?
Also, for public stuff we pretty much have transitioned to electronic signatures for almost everything at this point, so it is definitely possible.
Mikołaj Hołysz
in reply to modulux • • •The good alternative to Kindle is the golden trio of pdf/epub/mobi, with irremovable watermaks and visible warnings that "this copy belongs to John Smith (john.smith@example.org) and may not be shared with anybody else".
Bookstores here usually also offer some extra goodies for convenience, like the ability to quickly add an email address to send your books to, to integrate with Kindle or any other brand of reader that supports this, along with a Dropbox and/or Google Drive integration.
modulux
in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz • • •Mikołaj Hołysz
in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz • • •Just to be clear, this is a markedly worse user experience for sighted users, and one that requires far more technical expertise than clicking "buy next book in series" on your Kindle e-reader when you're done with the current one.
Just like all open standards, it's clunky as hell, as most users would much rather think in terms of books and series that just magically appear on their reader, instead of using the abstract, foreign and allien concept of files, files with different formats, a reader having an email address despite not being a person and all that.
Sukil Etxenike
in reply to modulux • • •Sukil Etxenike
in reply to Sukil Etxenike • • •modulux
in reply to Sukil Etxenike • • •Sukil Etxenike
in reply to modulux • • •Wil James
in reply to Sukil Etxenike • • •Alex, Nevertheless
in reply to modulux • • •Video tutorials.
(I am curious what would replace PDFs in terms of "here is a file format that using a different OS won't completely screw up," while also meeting your needs. Does something like that exist?)
modulux
in reply to Alex, Nevertheless • • •alcinnz
in reply to modulux • • •My understanding is that there's a degree in contradiction between both of your needs.
The whole point of ePub is that it can be differently whilst remaining legible!
ePub's a nice format, as a sighted person I prefer it...
modulux
in reply to alcinnz • • •Zoe
in reply to modulux • • •Chi Kim
in reply to Zoe • • •Alba 🌸
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Alba 🌸 • • •Alba 🌸
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Alba 🌸 • • •Kevin R Jones
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Kevin R Jones • • •Alba 🌸
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Alba 🌸 • • •Kevin R Jones
in reply to modulux • • •That operating systems don’t have any way to turn off ALL animations. I can’t see them, they aren’t cool, they only slow down and confuse screen readers.
Jen
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Jen • • •Nate
in reply to Jen • • •Not hard of hearing but Autistic here. Most neurotypical people don't even know that hyperlexia is a thing. I don't communicate well verbally, but my writing comprehension is just fine if. Videos are just as bad as sitting in a lecture hall for me. Either way, I get very little from the time spent. Particularly when put in perspective of the energy expended to glean information from the video vs what I would have expended if it had just been written down.
I had a research/writing class last term where the English department had gone out of their way to make as much video material as possible. One week's resources had two short pages and over a dozen videos. My professor did raise my concerns to the department head but they were pretty much dismissed.
modulux
in reply to Nate • • •Liz Hare PhD
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to Liz Hare PhD • • •PointlessOne
in reply to modulux • • •modulux
in reply to PointlessOne • • •