As many of you will know from personal experience, there is a longstanding issue with VoiceOver on Mac where Safari will frequently become unresponsive with VoiceOver repeatedly announcing the message “Safari not responding.” When this issue occurs, the user's Mac may become unusable for up to several minutes at a time. Sometimes it can be resolved by switching away from Safari. Sometimes restarting VoiceOver can resolve the issue.
Saw this online elsewhere and figured I’d share here for discussion
Yea, a dumb mistake on my part won’t make me shy away. It was super cool to find this place, even if it was through my ignorance. Don’t know any blind people irl so the thought never really crossed my mind that there would be a dedicated community like this.
The freedom to create third-party clients (apps) for social media platforms has a really vital effect on accessibility, because it facilitates friendly competition (and productive copying) among a wide range of client apps, as well as allowing disabled app developers to freely create apps that meet their own accessibility needs.
Reddit’s rug-pull with free API usage was thus especially controversial among blind users, virtually all of whom were using one of various third-party apps. While Reddit eventually made some gestures towards accessibility improvements in the first-party client, this place was nonetheless created as a hedge against their caprices.
Feel free to sub! Like the rest of Lemmy, this community has a lot of growing to do if it’s to replace its counterparts among the proprietary monoliths.
We did, but Lenny was more stable and offered a better path forward for development. We got some accessibility improvements implemented, before we even started up the instance.
Yea. Definitely wasn’t my brightest moment.
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Yea, a dumb mistake on my part won’t make me shy away. It was super cool to find this place, even if it was through my ignorance. Don’t know any blind people irl so the thought never really crossed my mind that there would be a dedicated community like this.
The freedom to create third-party clients (apps) for social media platforms has a really vital effect on accessibility, because it facilitates friendly competition (and productive copying) among a wide range of client apps, as well as allowing disabled app developers to freely create apps that meet their own accessibility needs.
Reddit’s rug-pull with free API usage was thus especially controversial among blind users, virtually all of whom were using one of various third-party apps. While Reddit eventually made some gestures towards accessibility improvements in the first-party client, this place was nonetheless created as a hedge against their caprices.
Feel free to sub! Like the rest of Lemmy, this community has a lot of growing to do if it’s to replace its counterparts among the proprietary monoliths.
That was a great write up, nice.
deleted by creator
We did, but Lenny was more stable and offered a better path forward for development. We got some accessibility improvements implemented, before we even started up the instance.