I'm happy to say that I was promoted from Quality Assurance Tester for XRNavigation, to Junior Software Engineer. This happened on Tuesday. I am beyond excited about this! I am honored that they've given me further opportunities to improve Audiom and grow as part of the team! I can't wait to see what the future holds. It's long been a dream of mine to develop for a project like this, one that actively works to solve challenges faced by the blind and visually impaired. In this case, it's exploring maps on any platform - the same ability sighted people have when they open Google Maps, or look at any website that contains a map "region" or "graphic" that those of us who are blind can't access.
audiom.net
xrnavigation.io
audiom.net
xrnavigation.io
Home - XR Navigation
You have a digital map. Your blind and low-vision visitors, your screen-reader users, your keyboard-only users, and the accessibility auditor reviewing yourXR Navigation
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Peter Vágner
in reply to Stevo • •@Stevo Thanks for mentioning audiom.net .
It's damn amazing tool.
What I am wondering and I don't seem to be able to figure it out is how to make the map follow my GPS position when running on a smart phone.
I'd like to look around as I move along the street.
Stevo
in reply to Peter Vágner • • •Peter Vágner
in reply to Stevo • •@Stevo There are two items that I think should be usefull when it comes to this:
If I press either of them I can see location is requested from the web Browser but the map does not update.
I'm using the scan feature after moving a bit and pressing goto GPS location. But I am always getting the same result from the scan feature despite moving some 100 metres or so.
If I regenerate the map it updates correctly however it takes a lot of time to be practical.
Allie Suhr
in reply to Stevo • • •acerbt
in reply to Stevo • • •Keri Svendsen
in reply to Stevo • • •