kestrell: (Default)
Kes: I'm currently taking a course on web design, so I'm using it as an opportunity to collect some of my writing.
Questions for the audience:
1. What do you think of the outline and list of writings below?
2. Is there anything specific, not included in the list below, that you would like to see included on the new webpage?
The GitHub guide and the new essay are not online yet, so that will be new material. I'm trying very hard to keep the plan reasonable but, reasonable not being my strong suit, I might add more.
Also, I'm not too jazzed about the title, but I want it to use the words "disability" and "technology" for search engine reasons, or is that an outdated web design idea?

Title: Kestrell's Disability and Technology Resources

Main page:

About me section
I'm a blind writer, disability and technology advocate, and MIT graduate. My writing focuses on disability and technology, which can include images of disability in science fiction, assistive technology, and accessible books.
This section will include an image of a kestrel (the falcon) with alt text.

Second section containing unordered list of links to pages containing writing:

1. to my blog my blog
2. New essay about disability in spec fic
3. Quick Start Guide for Using Jaws with GitHub
4. What Good Writers Still Get Wrong about Blind People,
Part 1 ,
Part 2
and Part 3
5. My thesis Decloaking Disability: Images of Disability and Technology in Science Fiction Media
6. Bibliography of science fiction containing images of disability and technology
And, if I have the energy,
7. Covid-19 resources collected from my blog posts

Footer section:
Contact me
Link to old website Blind Bookworm Website
kestrell: (Default)
Fun new Alexa skills:

• “Alexa, speak Spanish”
Hola! Alexa now speaks English and Spanish. Enable the multilingual mode today and enjoy a second language experience on your device.

• “Alexa, speak Klingon”

Also, Alexa loves science:
• “Alexa, recommend a science podcast”

and, because Alexa seems to have a hearing impairment sometimes, too, you can ask her
• “Alexa, tell me what you heard”
kestrell: (Default)
Have you never heard of NFB-NEWSLINE, or are you just starting out? Are you a seasoned pro and would like to learn more of the detailed features of the service? Do you use the iPhone app or Amazon ALEXA devices and want to master the use of NFB-NEWSLINE on them?
Do you know all of the information you can get over a touch-tone telephone? Did you get a new Victor Reader Stream, second generation, and want to learn how you can easily use it to download your favorite publications? Do you have questions about the service or suggestions for new features?

NFB-NEWSLINE of Indiana is extending an invitation for you to attend a training and informational get together with Mr. Scott White, Director of Sponsored Technology Programs at the National Federation of the Blind. Please join us on
Thursday, June 11, 2020, at 7:00 p.m. EST.

Come get your questions answered and enjoy some camaraderie!
continued below cut )
kestrell: (Default)
Kes: I hadn't even heard of the tixel before reading this article but, aside from being a cool new technology, it's fun to say. If I ever get that cyber guide dog, I think I will name her Tixel.

New display technology is allowing users to "feel" touch screens, giving the blind a way to interact with mobile devices.

Senseg's E-Sense technology,
http://senseg.com/
being developed in Sweden, recreates the sensation of different textures on touch screen devices. It uses "tixels," or "tactile pixels," to generate an electric field a few millimeters above the device's surface, enabling skin to feel finely tuned sensations replicating different textures.
The technology is similar to the concept of haptic feedback, which vibrates to confirm that a finger touch has been accepted, but has even farther-reaching implications.
Braille reading would be one immediate application for the technology. The blind and visually-impaired would be able to take advantage of the tactile-pixel technology, assisting them in reading messages on touch screen devices like smartphones. Down the road, the technology may even allow people to, for example, touch the face of a newborn baby or hold the hand of the long-lost friend.
Senseg said the technology may also create knobs, buttons and other tactile elements for the increasingly-popular mobile gaming market. Handset makers, currently struggle for placement of controls on the limited space of smartphones, may also find a use for tactile displays.


http://blogs.forbes.com/mobiledia/2011/07/12/new-touch-screens-allow-blind-to-read-braille

February 2024

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