Yahoo! Accessibility

Posts Tagged ‘web accessibility’

FCC Hosts Open Developer Day: Accessibility Innovation

Saturday, October 30th, 2010

On Monday, November 8, 2010, the Federal Communications Commission will sponsor an Open Developer Day event at FCC Headquarters in Washington, DC, to promote collaboration between Web developers in the public and private sectors, in furtherance of FCC goals to further innovation in accessible technologies and foster citizen participation in open government.

This will be a public, single-day event that prioritizes accessibility goals, though other Web solutions are also of interest. The event will feature guest engineers from the Yahoo! Developer Network and Yahoo!’s Accessibility team, and will have a component addressing the requirements and opportunities in the new Twenty-First Century Communications and Video Accessibility Act. Continue Reading…

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UIST 2010 Conference Report

Friday, October 22nd, 2010

The ACM Symposium on User Interface Software and Technology (UIST) was held this past week in New York City. UIST is one of the premier conferences for human-computer interaction (HCI), especially for those of us who approach HCI from a perspective of building new systems that address unmet user needs.

Three papers were presented that explicitly dealt with accessibility, and I thought I’d give a quick summary of each and provide a link so you could check them out for yourselves.

VizWiz: Nearly Real-Time Answers to Visual Questions

University of Rochester, MIT CSAIL, University of Washington, University of Maryland, and University of Central Florida

VizWiz is an accessible iPhone application that lets blind people take a picture, speak a question, and get answers from the crowd in nearly real-time. VizWiz was deployed to a number of existing blind iPhone users, and used to get a sense of the visual questions that blind people might want answered regardless of what current automatic technology can do. The paper describes strategies for getting answers back from Mechanical Turk quickly and cheaply (less than 30 seconds, and for a few cents), and an extension of VizWiz called LocateIt that helps users locate a specific object among many that might be tactually indistinguishable. (full disclosure: I was the first author of this paper!)

Continue reading UIST 2010 Conference Report

Part II: Assistive Technology and Accessibility Research in the Developing World

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Establishing AT research in the developing world is not going to be trivial, especially given the overall lack of existing scientific research capacity. Building this capacity must be based on a significant long-term investment and a commitment from the state and higher educational institutions to reward research both academically and commercially.

AT and Accessibility represent a massive breadth of work – building expertise in speech synthesizers for new languages requires a very different skill-set from building automated wheelchairs of currency readers. The most successful AT research centers have typically had connections with university, and thereby tapped into faculty with a range of interests. These have also bridged the connection between academia and industry, but from a funding perspective have almost always been kickstarted by the state. State commitments of inclusion to their vision-impaired populations cannot be realized without an investment in building an indigenous and inclusive research culture.

In an ideal case scenario, this would mean building a scenario where people can think of research as a career – from graduate studies onward either towards academic careers or industrial research positions. Given that the larger goals of building scientific research can be anything between very challenging to completely infeasible for a number of smaller countries, for the purposes of AT research there are three short-term possibilities.

Continue reading Part II: Assistive Technology and Accessibility Research in the Developing World

Yahoo! India wins 2010 Universal Design Awards

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Universal Design award receivers on stage with awards in hand

August 19, 2010

Yahoo! India Research & Development has been making great progress in the field of accessibility. The successful collaboration between product, engineering, and quality teams to make Yahoo! properties universally accessible, is showing signs of success.

In recognition of these efforts, the National Center for Promotion of Employment for Disabled People (NCPEDP), in association with AccessAbility and BarrierBreak Technologies, has awarded the Mphasis Universal Design Company Award to Yahoo! India R&D! for the year 2010. This award was given to Yahoo! India in the category of companies or organizations who have taken up the cause of accessibility and universal design.

Continue reading Yahoo! India wins 2010 Universal Design Awards