Access on Main Street

Hooking up a usable world, one mainstream product at a time.

Instapaper auto adjusts contrast based on time of day

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 16 November 2010

Instapaper is a neat little iPhone app that lets you save websites for future perusal. What’s interesting about its latest release is that it lets you enter your location, and adjusts the text/background contrast from dark-on-light to light-on-dark around the local time that the sun sets. Since we all need more contrast as we age, could you also enter your birthdate and have the contrast auto-adjust for that too?

Wired: New version of Instapaper knows when it’s nighttime

Visual signal for Twitter keywords

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 16 November 2010

In the spirit of Nabaztag, here’s an interesting hack involving an animatronic monkey that waves its arms whenever a keyword appears in a Twitter stream. Good alternative to a beep for Deaf and hard-of-hearing people.

Gizmodo: Super cute Twitter monkey goes bananas when it spots a keyword

Ready, set, Odiogo

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 8 November 2010

One of the most popular assistive technology features we’ve been asked about in recent years is the ability to convert text to downloadable audio files on the fly. Now there’s Odiogo, a free, mainstream service that does the same thing for “news sites and blog posts.” Great for anyone who prefers audio format or who benefits from simultaneous reading and listening. The only drawback is that it’s not controllable by the end user; instead, the website owner has to sign up for it.

Odiogo: Voice Your Content

Working?: (IE)Nine to (HTML)Five

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 2 November 2010

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) tested support for HTML5 among commonly-used browsers, and found that Internet Explorer 9 does the overall best job. However, these results are not entirely consistent with the accessibility-focused review of HTML5 being done by the Paciello Group (which gives the nod to the current Firefox beta), and some accessibility items seem to not be covered in the W3C testing. La luta continua.

The Register: First official HTML5 tests topped by…Microsoft

The Paciello Group: HTML5 accessibility

Exquisite control

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 20 October 2010

Oh my, we do like the Sony RM-KZ1 universal remote. Originally designed for kids, its main buttons are all distinct shapes (easy to distinguish by touch for blind folks) and have high-contrast labeling. Plus, it prevents volume from being changed too much too fast. It’ll set you back all of $18 at Target.

Ubergizmo: Sony rolls out RM-KZ1 remote control for kids

Why is the alphabet in that order? Is it because of that song?

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 20 October 2010

The AlphaUi keyboard is an interesting concept: you hold it like an iPad, but you press actual keys on the bottom with eight fingers rather than virtual keys on the top with your thumbs. The screen has a display that lights the keys as you press them. Our jury’s out as to whether the physical setup will provide an accessibility edge. Instead, what really intrigued us was the key order–alphabetic rather than QWERTY, which is great for people with cognitive disabilities as well as those who’ve never learned touch typing. Has QWERTY finally met its match? Will we see this reflected in other keyboard designs?

Engadget: AlphaUi Back-Type keyboard for tablets will never catch on, but we wish it would

Yakkity yak

Posted by Jane Berliss-Vincent 19 October 2010

The Conversacube is a small box that “listens” to ambient conversations and provides the user with cues about chiming in. Theoretically created for the shy, but could easily be helpful for people with disabilities such as autism, and possibly as a supplement to lipreading for some Deaf folks as well. That is, as long as they’re not too put off by the ugly green color.

Gizmodiva: The Conversacube helps you start conversations

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