Skip to main content


#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
When I was 9 or so, I discovered that one of the cineplex complexes in Poland operated a phone line with an IVR system that would let you explore the entire schedule of currently running movies. This was my first means of accessing information independently and on-demand. I was the movies expert in our house at that time and with movies like "Shrek", "Matrix", "Starwars" and "Harry Potter" coming out this was the time to be alive. I dreamt then that we will be able to access all of the info we want through a telephone. Turns out that's what #Switzerland is doing right now.
Voicenet is the service of the Swiss Union of the Blind, where you can call in and receive all the information you need to access culture, shopping, receive advice, benefit from the organization's services etc.
Some things you can find there:
- the current supermarket prospects with all of the weekly discounts and special offers read by volunteers;
- TV and radio schedule, including information on movies with audiodescription aired throughout the week;
- traffic and construction works;
- rail schedules;
- signing up for the Union's events;
- a voice forum where users can ask for advice and exchange information;
All of that provided by volunteers and an editorial team in three languages: German, French and Italian with the ability to navigate through content E.G. jumping from beverages to dairy products with the phone's keypad.
I realize that things like the NFB Newsline exist but it seems that, as Switzerland is a much smaller country, it is easier to offer much more local information.
sbv-bvas.ch/voicenet-2/
#Accessibility #Blind #Phone #languages #Switzerland #German #French #Italian #AdventCalendar

reshared this

in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
As an extra creative exercise, a question: how would you imagine the services you enjoy every day thanks to the Internet if our ultimate mode of accessing data was audio over the telephone? How would Mastodon sound like? What about internet shopping, spam, viruses, all that lovely stuff? Sound effect examples are welcome as are vague descriptions. #AdventCalendar #Accessibility #Blind #Sound #SoundDesign
in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
We need phone punk. A sci-fi genre inspired by cyberpunk and steampunk, except set in an alternative universe where the graphical user interface was never invented, computers still use complicated CLIs, and the only people who know how to operate them are phone operators whom normal people rely on for everything.

Paweł Masarczyk reshared this.

in reply to Mikołaj Hołysz

#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
@miki My understanding is that there are phone-based services, E.G. in the US, where those who can't operate smartphones can request to have an Uber ride ordered for them or other activities that are only accessible through apps so for some people this is not SF, it's called digital divide.
in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
That’s true. I was thinking along the lines of “what if we never switched to direct dialing and kept phone operators, giving them more and more responsibilities? Checking the weather, booking tickets, even browsing computerized encyclopedias. Imagine reading newspapers by calling the operator, requesting the articles you’d like to read, and then receiving them by fax”. I think you could make a whole sci fi subgenre out of that concept, just like steampunk or lit rpg
in reply to Paweł Masarczyk

#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
Good for them. We've had a service like that since 1994, and despite the growth of the Internet since then, it still serves an important purpose.

Paweł Masarczyk reshared this.

in reply to Jonathan Mosen

#Accessibility for the #Blind advent calendar: day 2 #Switzerland - open the content warning to discover the interesting fact for the day
@JonathanMosen Interesting! Is there anywhere I could read more about it? I also like the idea of voting by telephone that New Zealand and Australia have: so brilliant in its simplicity, yet so few countries embraced it.