kestrell: (Default)
Kes: For those on limited incomes, Amazon offers a discount on their Prime membership, and now they have created a specific program for this. After the links to information about the discount Prime account and its benefits (apologies for the lengthy URL, I couldn't figure out how to get a more direct link), I include a link to an article about PWD who find their own hacks for everyday access problems and how they are forced to turn to Amazon because their own medical insurance fails them.

From the Amazon announcement email:

You're a Prime Access member, saving you 50% on Prime.
See benefits
https://smile.amazon.com//gp/browse.html/ref=pe_63384240_671560960_pe_super//b/?node=23945845011

All of Prime, half the price.

You’re already enjoying 50% off monthly Prime membership for qualifying government benefits recipients. Only now, it has a name: Prime Access.

....You can also check out Amazon Access for free—more programs, more discounts, and more features that can make shopping on Amazon even more affordable.
Check out Amazon Access
https://www.amazon.com/b?node=24189583011&ref_=access_surl

End of announcement

Article:
Laura Mauldin
no. 64
July 2022
Care Tactics
Hacking an ableist world

https://thebaffler.com/salvos/care-tactics-mauldin

Excerpt

HERE IS WHAT DOESN’T GO VIRAL: Ángel worked as a housepainter for decades but had a stroke three years ago that paralyzed the left side of his body. Now, his favorite spot is the recliner in his living room. From his perch, he can reach some essential items that he stores on a table to his right: a power screwdriver, painter’s tape, and a clipboard with paper and pen.

“I’d like to mount this new striker plate on the front door,” Ángel says. He transfers himself from the recliner to his wheelchair and leans over to pick up a small metal striker plate along with the roll of tape from the table. Using his right foot, he turns around and propels his wheelchair toward the front door. Then, he props the roll of tape between his knees in order to pull off a section. He sets the striker plate on the tape, pulls a little more while bracing it with his knees, and tears it off. Ángel wheels in closer to the frame and lifts the tape and striker plate onto the inside of the door jamb, pressing it into place. It stays there, mounted to the spot where he needs it. “Now, I just need to screw it on.” He wheels over, gets a screw from the table, and passes it through the hole in the striker plate so that it sits just inside the hole already drilled into the door jamb. “See?” Now, he’s set up to use the screwdriver with his “good hand.”

Here is what does go viral: braille decoder rings, sign-language-translating gloves, “haptic footwear” for blind folks, stair-climbing wheelchairs. In other words, a preponderance of innovations, unveiled to great fanfare, that purport to solve disability-related problems. While the press applauds the tech sector’s forward-thinking and sensitivity to the needs of underserved populations, the concerns of disabled people—voiced again and again and again—are disregarded. So much uncritical attention gets lavished on these seductive yet generally silly objects that the disabled design critic Liz Jackson aptly named them “disability dongles” in 2019. This concept was recently taken up again in a piece for
Platypus
https://twitter.com/elizejackson/status/1110629818234818570
coauthored by Jackson, along with Alex Haagaard and Rua Williams. In it, they argue that disability dongles generate feel-good content for brands that may be “promising in concept, but in actuality unattainable.” Indeed, they’re often just prototypes that designers have no intention of ever manufacturing.
kestrell: (Default)
From the September-October Talking Book Topics.

NLS is working to develop an improved BARD Mobile app for the Kindle Fire and seeks patron volunteers to help test and provide feedback on experimental features and interfaces. All types of patrons are eligible, including low-vision users, multi-disabled users, digital braille readers, and VoiceView users.

Participating in beta testing requires no special technical expertise, only access to a Kindle Fire and familiarity with basic operation of the device. Supported Kindle Fire tablet device models include:
• Fire 7 (2019 – KFMUWI, 2022 – KFQUWI),
• Fire HD 8 (2018 – KFKAWI, 2020 – KFONWI)
• Fire HD 10 (2019 – KFMAWI, 2021 – KFTRWI)
• Fire HD 10 Plus (2021 – KFTRPWI)

Participants will be required to email feedback regularly to NLS. For more information, please contact Julia Kim (juliakim@loc.gov)
kestrell: (Default)
I have spent the past two days attempting to link my new Apple Music account with my Alexa, and I finally broke down and called the Apple disability line, who said that was an Amazon problem, so then I called the Amazon disability helpline, and the person who answered said that was an Echo problem, and so I finally ended up with Hailey, who is a goddess, and even called me back twice when I got popped out of the Alexa app and couldn't find how to get back to it unless I was not also in a phone call.

And once Hailey had walked me through the Alexa app settings until I found the Apple Music skill, it all went smoothly. When we got to testing whether it actually was linked and would work, I asked for Kermit Ruffins and Alexa gave me Kermit. Then I apologized to Hailey for making ecstatic squeeing sounds in her ear.

So, five stars for Amazon's disability helpline!
kestrell: (Default)
There are a number of criticism that can be made about Amazon but, when it comes to people with disabilities, Amazon, like Apple, has gone the extra mile to be disability-friendly which, even nearly thrity years after the ADA was passed, is still a rare thing.

Over the years, I have bought medical supplies that I couldn't find in a drugstore, medical equipment that arrived within a day, and many gadgets which made life more accessible
Jokari beverage opener
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000WH1Z2I/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
which not only opens my Coke bottles but I can use it to unstick my white cane when the sections get stuck in the fully extended position (oh, hey, just noticed the review by the husband of a flight attendent who says it even goes through airport security with no problem).

If you think you would like to join Amazon Prime, but are intimidated by the price, HowToGeek has this article on
How to score a cheap Amazon Prime subscription for Amazon Prime Day
https://www.howtogeek.com/428318/how-to-score-a-cheap-amazon-prime-subscription-for-prime-day/
which also mentions that Amazon offers six free month of Amazon Prime to students.

And Wired has this article about
Prime Day 2019: What You Should Know About Amazon
https://www.wired.com/gallery/amazon-prime-day-prep-stories/

February 2024

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