this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2024
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The rule also mandates universal Bluetooth standards and volume control compliance for all smartphones.

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[–] Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de 69 points 1 month ago (10 children)

I never realized how much we hated disabled people until I worked for a hospital/school.

[–] rottingleaf@lemmy.world 7 points 1 month ago (9 children)

"We".

Try being autistic and not disabled and using smartphones with sweaty hands and tired eyes. And modern UI design in general.

I've been dreaming of a certain legislation for PC user interfaces and the Web since 10 years ago ; in essence that would mandate that everything governmental and commercial should be usable for blind people (because with modern UI\UX I want to close my eyes and pretend I'm blind) with screen readers and Braille terminals.

That legislation would absolutely kill what clueless crowds call "user-friendly UIs", and I would be happy and gleeful, because it wouldn't kill UIs following good old industrial ergonomics.

It would, of course, present a lot of challenges for such a transition.

[–] podperson@lemm.ee 7 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Can’t speak to PC UI, but for the web, “public good” entities and government institutions have to follow ADA guidelines on usability for differently-abled people. Weird, because the law says this but does not get specific on what exactly must be done to be compliant. The gist is that those entities are “supposed to” follow WCAG, although those are only guidelines and not mandates.

I work in healthcare and our org, although we made best effort to make our site accessible for screen readers, color impairment issues, etc, we were still sued (lawsuit was a bit of a shakedown) and are now working to address and remediate each item in the suit with a third party. We want to be fully compliant but as of yet, there isn’t a “set of rules” that we can all look to make these sites compliant (basically just a bunch of suggestions). Weird times we live in.

[–] grysbok@lemmy.sdf.org 2 points 1 month ago

Same thing over on education. US government entities down to the local level have to comply with WCAG 2.1 by April 2026 iorc, with some exceptions for content created before the cutoff. The exceptions aren't clearly defined which is causing me a bit of a headache.

I mean, I'd love for all of our legacy documents and images to magically get image descriptions and quality OCR, but the archives have a terabyte of images and PDFs. It doesn't help that the ruling uses "archives" to mean "legacy stuff unlikely to be used" and we use "archives" to mean "stuff about the history of the college, which students are encouraged to consult".

Anyways, I'm all for accessibility. It's good. I'm just borrowing worries from tomorrow about implementation.

I just had the thought that some of our documents are handwritten in ye olde handwriting. That will be the biggest pain in the neck to transcribe. (Shout-out to Transkribus for making it suck less, but it'll still need to be proofread). I worry that we'll scan and post fewer of our documents going forward if we have to provide a transcription when we post them.

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