@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

pixelate

@pixelate@tweesecake.social

I'm Devin, previously devinprater@tweesecake.social. I'm back, trying to take everything less seriously. I love relaxing, reading, eating, chatting, and learning about technology.

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pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Okay y'all, Retroarch is now accessible on iOS! You will need a keyboard or gamepad to play and use the user interface. PSP games work great though! Just download all the core updates and needed core files for PPSSPP, if you plan on playing PSP games, and you're good! Link to the App Store page: https://apps.apple.com/app/id6499539433

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Lol, folks. Listen to your article before you post it. Doesn't matter what voice. You'll catch things like this from macrumors.com. In the app's settings (accessed via ChatPGT ➝ Settings… in the menu bar when the app's main window ...

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

So, I know generative AI is supposed to be just the most incorrect thing ever, but I want you to compare two descriptions. "A rock on a beach under a dark sky." And: The image shows a close-up view of a rocky, cratered surface, likely a planet or moon, with a small, irregularly shaped moon or asteroid in the foreground. The larger surface appears to be Mars, given its reddish-brown color and texture. The smaller object, which is gray and heavily cratered, is likely one of Mars' moons, possibly Phobos or Deimos. The background fades into the darkness of space. The first one is supposed to be the pure best thing that isn't AI. Right? Like, it's what we've been using for the past like 5 years. And yes, it's probably improved over those years. This is Apple's image description. It's, in my opinion, the best, most clear, and sounds like the ALT-text that it's made from, which people made BTW, and the images it was made with, which had to come from somewhere, were of very high quality, unlike Facebook and Google which just plopped anything and everything into theirs. The second was from Be My Eyes. Now, which one was more correct? Obviously, Be My Eyes. Granted, it's not always going to be, but goodness just because some image classification tech is old, doesn't mean it's better. And just because Google and Facebook call their image description bullshit AI, doesn't mean it's a large language model. Because at this point in time, Google TalkBack does not use Gemini, but uses the same thing VoiceOver has. And Facebook uses that too, just a classifier. Now, should sighted people be describing their pictures? Of course. Always. With care. And having their stupid bots use something better than "picture of cats." Because even a dumb image classifier can tell me that, and probably a bit more, lol. Cats sleeping on a blanket. Cats drinking water from a bowl. Stuff like that. But for something quick, easy, and that doesn't rely on other people, shoot yeah I'll put it through Be My Eyes.

pixelate, to random
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Holy crap y'all 2024 is just about half way over and what have I been doing with my life? Oh my gosh what the crap y'all, how is it almost half over! What the crap! Aaaaa

vick21, to accessibility
@vick21@mastodon.social avatar

How NVDA & OSARA are empowering blind people globally - Audio described Version: https://youtube.com/watch?v=N-y3yomLLSk&si=xiibf5ZxJzrlDnES

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@miki @chikim @vick21 Can pretty much confirm. Even really young blind people usually wish they could do everything on their phones.

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

It's June 10, 2024, at 4:00 PM Central US time. Almost every blind person that owns an iPhone has installed the iOS 18 beta. Some are playing retro games with the new, AI driven screen recognition. Others are gladly using DecTalk as their main voice, the Enhanced Siri voices that use ML to speak using emotion and context, as their reading voice, Eloquence as their notification voice (sent to one ear to minimize distractions), and finding it amazing that VoiceOver emphasizes italic text, and emboldens bold text. Others are finding it amazing that they can navigate their whole phone using Braille screen input, searching to find things by typing a few letters, or just swiping down through everything. A few are connecting their multi-line Braille displays, and feeling app icons and images, made much more understandable through touch, using an AI filter.

The next day, when news of all these features filters down to Android users, they quickly begin hammering Google, wanting DecTalk and Eloquence on their Pixel phones, like iOS users have. But Google is silent as always, only just now having given Chromebook users high quality Google TTS voices.

Note: great liberty has been taken to imagine the coolest outcome for the vague feature announcements Apple gave for VoiceOver users. We'll see just how cool, or not, they actually are on June 10.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@Lottie I wouldn't doubt it. Someone now owns DecTalk, and can license it to companies. that's ho the BT Speak has it. So, I wouldn't be surprised if Apple has it too. I mean, honestly, there aren't that many other TTS engines that blind people want that aren't on Apple devices, and new voices were mentioned specifically for VoiceOver. I mean it could be Piper, but I'd expect them to get DecTalk out of the way first.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@datajake1999 @Lottie Oh, oh my! The plot thickens!

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Chromebooks already have great screen reading capabilities built in...

Awww Google, how cute of you. Great? Nope. Next time, remember. Nothing about us, without us. ChromeVox has barely been updated in years, just like VoiceOver for Mac, and Narrator. ChromeVox barely has any options for fine-tuning verbosity, keyboard commands, pronunciation, and some keyboard commands, like Search + Control + A for accessibility actions, aren't even well-documented. I should know. I had to use an Acer Spin 713 for a good 3 months as my primary laptop. So kindly stop talking, then ask, then act before you speak further.

"Updated keyboard shortcuts and first-letters navigation in Google Drive"...

First letters navigation? Come on. Any blind person can tell that this wasn't written by anyone who uses these technologies.

And nowhere in this article is anything new for ChromeVox. See? This is the kind of, frankly, bullshit that I hate on GAAD. Just shut your mouth and listen for once.

https://blog.google/outreach-initiatives/education/global-accessibility-awareness-day-2024/

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Today is Global Accessibility Awareness Day (). Today, I want you to ask yourself, then act, before you speak. Do you have an app you're maintaining? Look at some resources for the framework you use for the user interface. Do you know if it's accessible or not? If it's not accessible, are you doing anything about it? Do you tell disabled visitors to your app/site that it's not accessible, and give them a timeframe, if any, when it will be? Do you have a website? If so, do you know if it's accessible or not? Are you an artist of any kind? Is your media accessible? Are you a writer? If so, are the images in your book described with ?

If you're a part of a company that has anything to do with accessibility, including proudly posting about it, do you have any disabled employees? If so, do you show them that they're appreciated? If not, why don't you have any? If you create art about people with disabilities, do you have disabled people take a look at it before you share it? If you write books that have images in them, have any disabled people checked to make sure the Alt-text makes sense, and that the book is accessible otherwise? If not, why not? And when you get disabled people to check out apps, books, sites for your professional needs, do you pay them for it?

Please do remember us on every other day of the year, but particularly today, please remember: nothing about us without us.

DavidGoldfield, to random

Google TalkBack will use Gemini to describe images for blind people https://groups.io/g/tech-vi/message/6953

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@DavidGoldfield @Rich And we'll be able to play with it in iOS betas, unlike TalkBack where we have to wait for public releases. :)

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@DavidGoldfield @Rich I would not be surprised to hear DecTalk. I mean, if they can do Eloquence, then why not?

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

A few more notes about video games and VoiceOver Recognition: the story mode of Blazblue reads very well with screen recognition, even better than Windows OCR! In some games, when menus have descriptions, you can tell which menu item you're on by the description of the item at the bottom. With the Provinence app, audio latency is amazingly low with my AirPods Pro 2. So, playing games using those is really, really amazing! No game mode needed! I can't wait for more blind people to get into this! #accessibility #blind #gaming #Provinence #iOS #RetroGames #emulation #emulators

appleinsider, to random
@appleinsider@mastodon.social avatar

While a release date isn't clear, OpenAI is debuting its own app for ChatGPT generative text for macOS users.

https://appleinsider.com/articles/24/05/13/openai-is-releasing-a-chatgpt-app-for-mac?utm_medium=social&utm_source=mastodon

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@technocounselor @appleinsider @mikedoise Yeah, sad. But they probably develop on Mac so that's expected these days. Apple just needs to get VoiceOver up to the quality of Windows, and add more scripting support.

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Well, this is awkward. I'm having to restart NVDA today, on my laptop, due to WASAPI probably, more than Orca, using Pipewire probably on Fedora 40 Mate spin yesterday.

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Anyone ever had to OCR a webpage to find a link? I did today. On a supposedly accessible college site, with nice fluffy captions on tables telling us poor simpleton blink blinks what the table will contain. Well it didn't contain the one link we were looking for! So yeah, thank goodness for OCR.

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Just spent today at work with Linux. Fedora's Mate spin still works well generally, and Orca is much more stable. And, according to Orca, the system never even ran over about 3 of the 16 GB of RAM on that Intel NUC. I set up Emacs and Emacspeak, Firefox, Bitwarden, VS Code, and never even took my laptop out of the bag. Of course, I really miss a lot of NVDA addons, like the OpenAI one, sounds for entering browse and focus modes, and the Thunderbird addon most of all. But I was able to log into, and use, Salesforce and Google Sheets. So now when I get a good workflow with Markdown and such, I think I'll just about, maybe, be able to start using it more. Packages are all up-to-date, Orca will alwasy be current, and hopefully I can one day move to a desktop environment with a proper notification center! Oh, and I'll have to see if Pidgin still takes up more RAM the more I use it.

Note that I still wouldn't expect a regular computer user to get into Linux, as far as setting it up. But, honestly, having the out on the market makes me hope that more power users and programmers will hammer Linux into more of a shape that blind people can be at home with.

pixelate, to random
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Oh my gosh why can't book stores use freaking headings! One heading per book result! Jesus! Is it that freaking hard?

TheQuinbox, to random

It just occurred to me that come June 22, I'll have had a phone for 10 years. Getting my 4S was truly my entrance into online communities, and so I'm very close to having been on the internet for 10 years. I definitely, definitely had access too young. In June of 2014, I was 8. That's just a tiny bit insane.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@cordova5029 @TheQuinbox Yeah, I've been online since like 2010 or so. First social network I was on, well maybe besides Facebook, was Klango.

fireborn, to random

State of iOS Braille support in May, 2024. Still shit. Nothing has been fixed. Nothing has changed. Cool.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@TheQuinbox @fireborn Try playing Diceworld with only Braille.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@menelion @TheQuinbox @fireborn Because it's not an actual magic tap, it's just the play/pause signal, I'm pretty sure.

pixelate, to accessibility
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

Please boost for reach if this kind of stuff interests you. Will post more on this later.

Once upon a time, there was a cool emulator frontend called Retroarch. This emulator wasn't accessible until I and a few other gamers went to them and asked about adding accessibility. An amazing person known as BarryR made it happen. Now, if you turn on accessibility mode in settings, or pass the "--accessibility" (or something like that) flag on the command line, you get spoken menus, including the emulator's pause menu, good for saving states and such. Then, using PIL and other image processing Python utilities, running a server and hooking into Retroarch, the script allowed players to move around the map, battle, talk to NPC's, ETC. The only problem was, no one wanted to test it. The blind gaming community pretty much spoke, saying that we want new games. We want cool new, easy accessibility. So that's what we have no, follow the beacon or get sighted help in the case of diablo and such. It's sad, but meh. It's what we wanted I guess. No Zelda for us. So, this is about as far as he got:

To expand on what devinprater was saying: I am working on an accessibility pack/service for Final Fantasy 1 for the NES (this was what was shown in the latest RetroArch update). The idea is similar to how Pokemon Crystal access works, but it's using the RetroArch AI Service interface to do so.
Right now, the FF1 access service is mostly done, but I need more testers to try it out and give me feedback on how it's working. Right now, you can get up to the point where you get the ship, but there's no code to deal with how the ship moves, so that still needs to be done. Likewise with the airship later on.
The service works the latest version of RetroArch, on linux and mac, but not windows. This is due to how nvda reads out the text and until the next major update to nvda (which will have a feature to fix this), it'll have to wait. If you have those, I (or maybe devinprater) can help you set it up on mac/linux to test out. The package itself is available at: https://ztranslate.net/download/ff1_pac … zip?owner=

#accessibility #finalFantasy #RetroArch #blind #emulator #emulation #Python #ai #ML #MachineLearning

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

So, I get that old games are, well, old. I get that new games are really cool. And I know, I'm the biggest hypocrit of them all because I can't code and should be spending 24/7 learning to code so I can be the change I want to see in the world and all that FossShit. And honestly, I don't know how hard it was to make that project, I really don't. But if that can be done, I kinda have the feeling that modders that make Super Mario hacked ROMs, or decompile Super Mario 64, maybe could spend a bit of time on accessibility of these old games.

And here we come to a sad truth. Just because a community is small, does not mean accessibility will be prioritized. Just because a game studeo is huge, like Netherrealm Studeos, doesn't mean accessibility will be forgotten, either. I've gone to several different emulation communities. I asked for audio cues to be added into PPSSPP, and that's why they're in there now. Since the GUI can't be made accessible, I can still navigate it on mobile with a controller. I'm currently trying to get Provinence and Ignited made more accessible. I've kinda given up on Delta because that team has all the hype so is less likely to listen, at least that's kinda how I feel.

But seriously though, there aren't many activists among us. And there's just not much the few of us can do. But my dream, and I know how pathetic dreams are in this age of everyone looking down on everyone else, is that a blind person can enjoy and preserve in our own culture, what sighted people have been able to access for the last 20 years or so. Thousands of games, just sitting there ready to play. And I mean, this was like 4 years ago, with less blind programmers out there, less resources for ROM hacking and emulator scripting, and less devs. Now that emulation is on iOS, I seriously hope that this improves. I mean, imagine a blind person that uses their iPhone as their only computing device, being able to just download an emulator, already having scripts pre-installed and ready for a ROM, being able to just plop in Chrono Trigger and playing it like anyone else. That's my dream. Stupid, yes. But equal access has probably always seemed stupid before it's a thing.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

And honestly, I wouldn't even start with the huge projects, like Zelda. I'd start with Mortal Kombat, Street Fighter, Soul Calibur, all that. Make the menus talk, read tutorials, move lists, pause screens, all that. I mean, I don't know how easy that would be, since their graphics are going to be different than Mario or Final Fantasy, but surely if we can do cheat codes that mess with memory ingame, we should be able to track the cursor in menus.

evilcookies98, to random
@evilcookies98@dragonscave.space avatar

Is there anyway to get a longer neck/shoulder strap for my Braille display case? It’s short enough so that if I put it in my lap, it tries to get away, but if I hang it around my neck, it won’t sit flat on my lap. It’s a non-issue when I have a flat surface to put it on, but that’s not always the case. It’s adjustable, but it’s stretched out as long as it will go.

pixelate,
@pixelate@tweesecake.social avatar

@evilcookies98 Oh, I thought I was the only one that did that. I hate short neck straps. I barely used my EReader when I didn't have a strap for it. But yeah, just look for stuff like lanyards and stuff like that.

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