Steven Aquino Steven Aquino

Microsoft Announces new Developer Tool meant to make ‘a more accessible web’

In a post published on the Windows blog, Microsoft’s Evelynn Kaplan and Patrick Brosset shared news on Monday of a newly-released developer tool called ARIA Notify. The public API is touted as “[making] web content changes more accessible to all users.” The tool is “an ergonomic and predictable way to tell assistive technologies (ATs), such as screen readers, exactly what to announce to users and when.”

ARIA Notify is available today as an Origin Trial beginning with Microsoft Edge 136. It can be used locally by enabling the --enable-blink-features=AriaNotify feature flag.

“ARIA Notify is designed to address scenarios where a visual change that’s not tied to a DOM [Document Object Model] change and not accessible to assistive technology users, happens in the page. Examples include changing the format of text in a document, or when a person joins a video conference call,” Kaplan and Brosset write of the API’s raison d'être. “Developers have come to rely on ARIA live regions as a limited workaround. ARIA Notify is an imperative notification API that’s designed to replace the usage of ARIA live regions, and overcome its limitations, in these scenarios.”

Kaplan and Brosset explain Microsoft’s motivation for releasing ARIA Notify stems from the challenges faced by Blind and low vision people to identify user interface changes they didn’t initiate on their own volition. ARIA live regions, the post goes on to say, “are the only mechanism available today that communicates dynamic content changes to users of assistive technology.” The problem, of course, is these ARIA live regions are “tightly coupled” with DOM elements predicated on the notion visual changes happen within the UI of a webpage. Many changes, however, happen without the DOM being modified. Kaplan and Brosset cite several examples of this occurrence, including a user in a text-editing field and using the Ctrl+B keyboard shortcut to embolden text. In this case, the person still should get audible conformation of the event occurring despite “no UI elements [being] used by the user, and the DOM didn’t necessarily change.”

Microsoft posted an ARIA Notify explainer and encourages feedback via its GitHub repo.

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How Mobile Apps are ‘failing’ users with disabilities and why Accessibility matters

Last month, software development firm ArcTouch released findings of a study which examined the state of accessibility in mobile apps. The recent report, which is called the State of Mobile App Accessibility Report (SOMAA), is espoused by ArcTouch as an assessment of “the accessibility of 50 leading Android and iOS apps across five industries: Food & Delivery, Payments, Fitness, Shopping, and Streaming.” The SOMAA report was put together with disability-led accessibility platform company Fable.

At 30,000 feet, the SOMAA report paints a rather bleak picture of disability inclusion.

“Our analysis of app accessibility reveals a concerning reality: The vast majority of apps are failing users with disabilities,” ArcTouch wrote of the high-level takeaway on the SOMAA site. “72% of those who rely on any of the four assistive technologies we tested may have a poor or failing app experience in at least one step of a typical user journey.”

ArcTouch’s head of accessibility Ben Ogilvie explained to me in a recent interview awareness, which is the core of reports like the SOMAA, is “certainly on the rise” and noted accessibility is increasingly part of conversations surrounding technology. What the SOMAA report lays bare, Olgilvie told me, is the implementation of accessibility in mobile software “needs more help.” Apropos of this story being published in May, Olgilvie also said accessibility’s amplification in the tech industry’s mainstream consciousness can partly be attributed to annual Global Accessibility Awareness Day celebration. GAAD, as the occasion is colloquially known in the community, falls on the third Thursday of each May; this year’s occasion is slated for next Thursday, May 15.

One of two men behind GAAD’s creation is Joe Devon. A web developer by trade, Devon served as an advisor to ArcTouch as the company was putting together its SOMAA report. Devon is quoted on the SOMAA site, saying in part that investing in accessibility isn’t merely the right thing to do morally speaking, it actually is “what’s best for your business and brand.” The rationale is perfectly logical: the more accessible a company’s product(s) are, the more a user base—and sales—will grow and, importantly, diversify. As the world’s largest marginalized and underrepresented group, disabled people comprise a lot of potential users for businesses to target and market towards.

Devon expressed excitement for the SOMAA report largely because, as the co-founder of GAAD, the report’s existence means accessibility will be relatively top of mind for more than a single day of the year. Still, he shared an anecdote in which he saw someone on social media jokingly post that once GAAD comes and goes every year, the disability community can “look forward to 364 days of global accessibility oblivion.”

Ogilvie, who worked at Apple in the 2000s and whose immediate family copes with disability, said the main driver for creating the SOMAA report was to provide insight on the accessibility of mobile apps, akin to how WebAIM looks at websites. There isn’t much software which measures accessibility, he added, so the work must be done manually. “We decided we needed that data, so we decided to look at it and start doing that research as far as where things are in accessibility for mobile apps,” Ogilvie said.

Ogilvie called the findings from said research “disappointing but unsurprising.”

Both Ogilvie and Devon said there are companies who do right by accessibility, as well as those who create ad campaigns that admittedly “tug on heartstrings,” according to Devon, but are otherwise nothing more than patronizing lip service. Many corporations will produce flashy, poignant videos that go onto websites with zero captioning or audio descriptions, Devon added. Then there are companies whose internal teams want to do right by the disability community, but gets unsupported by other people within the organization. The report doesn’t put anyone in particular on blast out of professional courtesy, but Ogilvie said “you could tell the apps that had teams that were consistently working towards building things accessibly and going beyond the minimums and thinking about the user experience throughout the entire user journey.”

Devon concurred, saying accessibility support is “all over the map.” He said to be successful, it boils down to “having a champion” for disability and the disability community from within. The most ardent supporters of accessibility, Devon said, are companies who people have been personally affected by disability in one way or another. That’s a big reason why accessibility awareness has been on an upswing in recent years, but Devon acknowledged the increase in traction isn’t necessarily commensurate with an increase in desired results vis-a-vis the new SOMAA data.

If the numbers don’t improve, that’s a 5-alarm fire for Olgilvie and Devon.

Ogilvie noted a perceptual problem in which third-party developers oftentimes will presume a company like Apple for instance, whose work in the accessibility area is nigh universally renowned, makes their platform(s) accessible “out of the box” so individual apps needn’t be made accessible by their own devices. VoiceOver, Apple’s screen reader for Blind and low vision people, does provide app makers a lot “for free” in terms of the API, especially with labels. Still, it’s up to the developer to dig deeper and put in the work to customize VoiceOver such that it works fluidly with their specific software.

“There are a number of misconceptions around accessibility when it comes to mobile,” Ogilvie said. “Our report disproves that you can’t just leave it to the platform and assume it’s accessible by default. You do have to pay attention and put in the work.”

As to feedback and the future, Ogilvie said companies who have read the SOMAA report have had a positive reception. He said they have lauded the report as “a clear call to action to drive change,” which is precisely what the report was born to do. Olgilvie said it’s supposed to “spark those conversations [around accessibility] and give companies some kind of benchmark to measure against as a place to start.” Ogilvie said the team hasn’t settled on a cadence for future versions of the SOMAA report, but said keenly “my hope is we will be able to produce this with some regularity.”

Fore his part, Devon said the future of mobile accessibility will be fascinating to watch unfold—especially as ever-burgeoning technologies like artificial intelligence grip the industry with an even tighter hold. It’s too early to tell, he noted, whether AI will help making mobile apps more (or less) accessible. That said, Devon said if the SOMAA report can carry influence on companies, “then they’ll put in an effort to make sure [to prioritize accessibility] because they’re the builders of apps… they’re tool builders.”

“If we make a push for [companies] to make sure the code they push out is accessible, [the prioritization of accessibility] will get better,” he said.

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Example No. 5,350,000 Why Big News Outlets Must Invest in Disabled Writers

Late last week, New York Magazine published a deeply reported story by Ben Terris on Pennsylvania Democratic senator John Fetterman. The piece, headlined “All By Himself,” is an astounding fit of journalism; Terris and his editor(s) deserve the utmost kudos for their work. At the same time, the piece also is soberingly illustrative of society’s collective fear of disability and of the disability community writ large. On Twitter/X, New York Magazine described Fetterman as “an erratic senator who has become almost impossible to work for, and whose mental health situation is more serious and complicated than previously reported,” adding the senator’s staffers—and his family, particularly his wife Gisele—“now question his fitness to be a senator.”

“All By Himself” depicts people in Fetterman’s orbit being understandably concerned for his mental health and wellbeing, but it’s more. In actuality, it shows fear of disability.

It’s a notion I readily picked up on early in my reading of the story, with Terris writing about Fetterman’s need to use captioning features on his iPhone to help compensate for his audio-processing disability stemming from a stroke suffered in 2022. It should not be alarming in the slightest, even for a sitting public official, to use their iPhone (or Android phone, for that matter) and use accessibility features to make conversations more accessible. At his core, Fetterman is a man who had a stroke and had his cognition affected accordingly; if he is indeed on a “recovery plan,” as Terris says, then of course Fetterman is going to use technology as part of it. If Fetterman weren’t a notable public figure, his care routine would be normalized by his medical team and his family and friends. He very likely would be encouraged to use captioning on his iPhone in order to bolster his comprehension of conversations he holds with other people. The whole point of accessibility, whether digital or tangible, is to provide disabled people—and make no mistake, Fetterman is disabled—access to the world. To say that Fetterman used an accommodation in order to participate in an on-the-record interview is to insinuate accessibility software is inherently bad or a canary in the coal mine.

I’m not going to argue mental fitness for those holding public office. Whether or not Fetterman is cognitively capable of serving his constituents is beyond the scope of this piece. There is a cogent argument to be made for his decreased cognition affecting his policy stances, not to mention his general demeanor. But the enduring vibe of Terris’ story is unmistakably dour: people are scared shitless of disability. That is the most important takeaway from “All By Himself” in my view; it reinforces the idea, however unstated, that disability is a fate worse than death. As a lifelong disabled person, the aforementioned vibe is bothersome because the implicit lesson is that people with disabilities somehow are “lesser” humans that ought to be pitied as the moribund, sorrowful lot we are under the guise of ostensible “concern” for one’s mental health. To reiterate, there can be spirited debate over how much intellectual disabilities can, or should, affect a sitting senator; what’s clear, however, is Fetterman is getting the same type of coverage President Biden received following his disastrous debate last June.

Put another way, the mainstream media showed yet again it does not know how to cover disability with dignity. As I noted earlier, it shows society does not like disability.

As I said at the outset, Terris’ story is an exemplar of great reporting. At the same time, though, he would have been better served by including color from neurologists and other stroke survivors. Talk about what happens to the human brain when a stroke happens and paint a general picture of the recovery process. However great the reporting may be, Terris unwittingly (and unsurprisingly) doubled down on the harmful stereotypes which plague the disability community by casting Fetterman as a broken, feeble man incapable of caring for himself—let alone those he’s elected to represent.

In a journalistic context, “All By Himself” serves more evidence that newsrooms sorely need to invest in hiring reporters who are disabled. Disability, across politics or technology or any other vertical, sees a pittance of the robust coverage like other facets of social justice in gender, race, and sexuality. Terris’ story is proof positive of such a sentiment, as Fetterman is positioned, once again, as a “lesser” person and politician.

However compromised his faculties, Fetterman deserves better on Capitol Hill.

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Brief Followup on OLED TVs and Accessibility

Last night, I started rewatching another of my favorite shows in For All Mankind. The series, available on Apple TV+, is set within an alternate universe in which the Soviet Union won the space race and landed on the moon before the Americans. A Russian cosmonaut, Alexi Leonov, was the first human to set foot on the moon instead of the American astronaut Neil Armstrong. For All Mankind has run for four seasons thus far, with a fifth being green-lit alongside a spinoff series. I’m eagerly awaiting Season 5.

If you’re into space stuff—and good drama—you should check out For All Mankind.

As much as I adore For All Mankind for its entertainment value, I admittedly had an ulterior motive for wanting to rewatch it. As I recently wrote, I’ve had two LG OLED televisions come my way since the beginning of the year as replacements for two TCL QLED sets (one being mini-LED). The new TVs represent my first foray into OLED on massive screens, as I’ve long had experience with OLED on devices like my iPhone, Apple Watch, and in recent times, my iPad Pro. I’ve appreciated the black levels and contrast on those smaller displays, but there’s nothing like experiencing OLED on a expansive display like on a television’s. With no hyperbole, it’s been revelatory for me.

I have a 77-inch LG C3 in the living room and a 48-inch LG B4 in my office. The former is a 2023 model, while the latter is from 2024. Both work with aplomb, and I’m so happy.

As I said last month, OLED is to TVs what Retina was to iPhone 4 back in 2010. Once you see them, you can’t go back—the picture quality is just too pristine, too captivating.

It turns out, For All Mankind is the perfect type of show, what with dealing with blasting off into outer space, to help OLED flex its considerable visual muscle. Chief among it is contrast and black levels; both are astounding on OLEDs, due largely to the fact OLEDs are capable of pixel-level control. There is not one whit of blooming or a “halo effect” during scenes where the NASA astronauts are in space—it’s just pitch black. Likewise, OLEDs have the ability for infinite contrast because of the corresponding perfect blacks. What this means is, everything on screen is set off beautifully, and in incredible fidelity, because of the rich colors and, once again, the OLED’s ability to control its output at the pixel level. All told, what this means in an accessibility context—in my experience, anyway—is the picture quality is so good that it makes watching TV shows and movies more accessible—and, arguably more importantly, more enjoyable. I’ve noticed myself feeling far less eye strain and fatigue when watching something. It isn’t often that I gush about a piece of technology—OLED isn’t without its warts, mind you—but I am lovestruck right now with my TVs. They make watching content so much fun.

In the name of OLEDs not being perfect, it’s worth mentioning my biggest beef with using my TVs these last few months is they aren’t nearly as bright as my previous sets. They aren’t dim by any stretch, but the ABL, or auto-brightness limiter, on the B4 is particularly aggressive at tamping down brightness levels to save from burn-in. The eagerness of the ABL is a prime reason why I remain deeply intrigued in a mini-LED TV like Sony’s Bravia 9. The TV is the company’s flagship, not one of its OLEDs, and is renowned by reviewers for its extreme brightness and, most notably, its OLED-like blacks. What’s more, the Bravia 9 comes in an 85-inch size; if I had one wish, I’d want it to be an upgrade to the 83-inch version of the C3. I definitely want bigger in the future.

But yeah, OLED TVs are spectacular—as is For All Mankind. Go watch it tonight.

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If Apple Eventually Raises Prices, the biggest loser Will be Shoppers needing Accessibility

I’ve long instituted a running gag of sorts for when Apple’s earnings calls happen.

I usually post this GIF to Twitter/X and cheekily say it comprises my reporting of the call.

Today’s call, however, merits more than a pithy post. Specifically, Apple CEO Tim Cook answered a question from an analyst about potential price hikes in response to President Trump’s tariffs plan. As of this writing, Apple’s prices are holding steady, but the company did concede today it expects to incur $900 million in costs in consequence of the tariffs this quarter. To reiterate, Apple has, for now at least, chosen to eat these costs—because they can—rather than pass them onto the buying public.

“Obviously, we’re very engaged on the tariff discussions,” Cook said when asked about potential changes to Apple’s price list. “We believe in engagement and will continue to engage. On the pricing piece, we have nothing to announce today. I’ll just say that the operational team has done an incredible job around optimizing the supply chain of the inventory, and we’ll obviously continue to do those things to the degree that we can.”

The reason I’m covering today’s earnings call with more zeal is, of course, accessibility. Namely, it’s worth pointing out that (a) Apple products already are priced at a premium; and (b) even the remotest of possibilities Apple decides to raise its prices on account of the tariffs will have negative effects on legions of disabled people. This matters a lot; I’ve written before about the attainability of Apple gear, as well as how most in the disability community don’t make much money, if at all, to comfortably afford said Apple products. Moreover, both factors are worth underscoring because of the collateral damage: to wit, it’s entirely plausible any price hikes from Cook and team puts vital assistive technologies out of reach for a not-insignificant swath of people in the disability community. Someone wanting the least expensive iPhone, the new 16e for instance, for its robust roster of accessibility features could well have to postpone their purchase because even the ostensibly “cheapest” iPhone is beyond their wallet’s ken.

It’s true not all disabled people live impoverished; on the contrary, Apple employs innumerable people with disabilities who are presumably highly well-compensated for their labor. The salient point simply is that the vast majority of disabled people in this country (if not worldwide) aren’t so financially privileged—that shouldn’t be forgotten.

Rising costs obviously hurts everyone’s pocketbooks, but the effects oftentimes are more painful for those who hail from marginalized and underrepresented communities. In other words, although accessibility seemingly has nothing to do with the proverbial bean-counters within Apple Park, it’s times like this that illustrate how accessibility, one way or another, pervades itself into every aspect of human life if you’re disabled.

Apple reported revenue of $95.4 billion, a 5% increase year-over-year, for Q2 2025.

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Google Gemini could Be Coming to Apple Intelligence later this year, report says

Emma Roth and David Pierce of The Verge co-bylined a story published on Wednesday in which they report Google CEO Sundar Pichai said it’s his hope Google Gemini comes to Apple Intelligence as an optional model by the end of the year. The comment came during Pichai’s time on the stand giving testimony for Google’s search monopoly trial.

Pichai noted Apple chief executive Tim Cook told him during a recent meeting that Apple Intelligence would get more support for third-party AI models “later this year.”

“The integration would presumably allow Siri to call on Gemini to answer more complex questions, similar to the integration that Apple launched with OpenAI’s ChatGPT,” Roth and Pierce wrote of the ramifications of a potential Apple-Google deal over Gemini. “Apple senior vice president Craig Federighi hinted at plans to build Gemini into its Apple Intelligence feature last June, when the AI service was first announced.”

I attended the “fireside chat,” held after last year’s WWDC keynote, during which moderator iJustine—whom, incidentally, I interviewed in 2023—asked Federighi and then-AI boss John Giannandrea about Gemini and Apple Intelligence. It was during this discussion when Federighi said it’s Apple’s goal to “enable users ultimately to choose the models they want”—which could be Gemini for a not-insignificant swath of users.

I typically don’t write stories couched around what churns out of the Apple rumor mill, but do make exceptions for accessibility’s sake. This is one such occasion, as Gemini has supplanted OpenAI’s ChatGPT as my preferred generative AI tool. The Gemini app has become so integral to my digital doings, in fact, that it has earned a permanent place on my iPhone’s Home Screen and on my iMac’s Dock. In my experience, I’ve found Gemini to be mostly good at reliably giving me good information; it does get things wrong and hallucinates, but that’s to be expected for any such tool. Design-wise, I prefer the Gemini user interface to that of ChatGPT’s. I find the former more humane and dynamic, whereas the latter feels staid and utilitarian. As to how Gemini does as an assistive technology, I find it has subsumed (albeit not entirely) traditional web searches. Rather than endure umpteenth search results in a browser window, which requires good amounts of visual and motor energy, Gemini does the grunt work for me and collates everything into a single space. It’s a shining example of generative AI as accessibility; many disabled people can find conventional Google searches taxing in many respects, especially when doing deep research for essays or other projects. That Gemini exists means conducting said research becomes much more accessible—and expedient. Although many educators lament the proclivity of students nowadays to lean on generative AI for their schoolwork, the reality is to put one’s weight on something like Gemini isn’t (always) an indicator of laziness or, worse, academic dishonesty. On the contrary, it’s downright shrewd, not to mention empowering, to spot generative AI’s strengths in accessibility and take advantage of them accordingly.

Roth and Pierce note Pichai’s comment lends further credence to rumblings that Gemini indeed is coming to Apple Intelligence sooner than later. Their report makes mention of news from February in which “Google” is listed in Apple Intelligence-related code found within an iOS 18.4 beta. As Apple Intelligence currently stands, Siri will ask users if they wish to use ChatGPT in answering complex questions that are beyond the virtual assistant’s ken. Presumably, Gemini could one day do that as well, assuming someone has chosen it as their desired third-party model over the default ChatGPT.

News of Pichai’s comment regarding Gemini was first reported by Bloomberg.

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Pocket Casts App Adds Support for Generated Transcripts in Latest Update

Popular cross-platform podcast client Pocket Casts announced this week the app now supports transcripts with the 7.85 update. The company notes the feature is available on iOS and Android for Plus and Patron members, with Pocket Casts touting the “powerful” update that “makes engaging with your favorite podcasts easier than ever.”

Pocket Casts stresses it still supports transcripts supplied by individual podcasters, but says the generated ones are intended to “[expand] access by automatically generating them for new episodes from the most-followed podcasts.” The generated transcripts are searchable too, with Pocket Casts instructing users in its announcement to access the transcript by tapping the Message icon located in the Now Playing screen’s toolbar.

I don’t use Pocket Casts on iOS, but this is a notable development nonetheless. While it’s great to hear Pocket Casts will maintain support for manually supplied transcripts, generated versions cater to an obvious issue: not every podcast—perhaps the majority of the most popular shows—supports transcripts at all. In an accessibility context, this can make popular news shows like The New York Times’ The Daily inaccessible to many—especially obviously to those who are Deaf or hard-of-hearing. Podcasts, like music, is a medium steeped in the presumption everyone can hear (or hear well). Thus, podcasts are logically inherently exclusionary—which makes sense on one hand, but with the rise of technology’s presence and power, can help turn the status quo on its head. To wit, that Pocket Casts is now automatically generating transcripts makes podcasts accessible to people who heretofore couldn’t enjoy them like everyone else. This is, of course, predicated on the notion the transcript, like many captions, isn’t crap.

Put another way, transcripts are to podcasts what haptic feedback is to music.

Despite Marco Arment being a longtime friend, I switched from using his Overcast as my preferred podcast player to using the stock Apple Podcasts app on my iPhone and iMac. I did so largely because of the immense accessibility transcripts provide me; Apple announced support for transcripts a little over a year ago, which is when I made the decision to change over. I still adore Overcast for myriad reasons—not the least of which because Arment is a staunch ally of the disability community and prioritizes accessibility in his app. What could sway me to return to Overcast is, if come WWDC, Apple announced a “TranscriptKit” API for App Store developers (like Arment) to hook up to their apps. Pocket Casts seemingly has built their own framework, but an API officially blessed by Apple would go a long way to not only helping users, but help app makers for whom rolling their own is beyond their technical ken for whatever reason(s).

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Waymo, Toyota Announce Partnership aimed at ‘Advancing Autonomous Driving’

Earlier this week, Waymo and Toyota jointly put out an announcement in which the two companies detail a “strategic partnership” forged in the name of “advancing autonomous vehicle deployment.” The companies described the partnership as “built on a shared vision of improving road safety and delivering increased mobility for all.”

Notably, Waymo and Toyota are focused on “personally-owned” autonomous vehicles.

“Toyota has long advanced research and development in support of a zero-traffic-accident vision, guided by a three-pillar approach that integrates people, vehicles, and traffic infrastructure,” the Japanese automaker said of its work in a statement included in the announcement. “Automated driving and advanced safety technologies play a central role, exemplified by the development and global deployment of Toyota Safety Sense (TSS)—a proprietary suite of advanced safety technologies. TSS reflects Toyota’s belief that technologies have the greatest impact when they are made widely accessible. Through this new collaboration, the companies aim to further accelerate the development and adoption of driver assistance and automated driving technologies for POVs, with a continued focus on safety and peace of mind.”

For its part, the Alphabet-backed Waymo said in part it is “building a generalizable driver that can be applied to a variety of vehicle platforms and businesses over time,” adding the joint venture with Toyota will “begin to incorporate aspects of its technology for personally owned vehicles.” Moreover, co-chief executive officer Tekedra Mawakana said in a statement for the announcement Waymo aspires to be “the world’s most trusted driver” and noted the decision to work with Toyota is a manifestation of shared values—particularly towards the ideal of “expanding accessible transportation.”

From an accessibility perspective, what captivated me to cover this Waymo × Toyota news is the concept of personally-owned autonomous vehicles. As I’ve noted many times before, I’ve covered Waymo at extremely close range over the last few years and have been a Waymo One user here in San Francisco before the app became publicly available. As someone whose vision is so impaired it precludes me from obtaining a driver’s license, the advent of Waymo has been a life-changing revolution of the first order. As much as I’m a proponent of richly-funded public transit systems, Waymo’s presence here in the city means I needn’t navigate crowded busses or deal with overly chatty Uber and Lyft drivers. More pointedly, I needn’t have to lay myself at the mercy of family and friends to effectively be my personal chauffeur. By contrast, Waymo allows me to move about town with agency and autonomy because a car is just a few taps away on my iPhone. What’s more, the nerd in me adores the technological advancements that make Waymo possible—down to ostensibly minor amenities such as the door unlocking automatically when someone approaches the waiting vehicle.

Technical wares aside, what really and truly endears Waymo to me is the accessibility of it. Waymo makes transport more accessible to me. It affords me opportunities to assert my independence as a person with disabilities. It’s something I’ve written about before, on numerous occasions in fact, but which are always worth repeating. Waymo, and its ilk, aren’t beyond reproach; there’s always room for improvement. The salient point is simply the advent of fully autonomous vehicles has been a revelation for myself and others in the Blind and low vision community. It’s neither trivial nor can be overstated.

Of course, I don’t own the Jaguar SUVs I ride around in with Waymo. If I’m praising Waymo for its accessibility prowess, its zenith—the mountaintop—would be personally-owned vehicles. Obviously, this wouldn’t be Waymo proper; to the conceit of the Toyota partnership, it would be even more life-altering to buy a car based on Waymo’s technologies. I wouldn’t need Waymo at all because I have one of my very own. The economics, not to mention the legal logistics, of a Blind person buying a car surely need deep consideration. A lot of the conversations that need to happen will force legislators to confront the systemic ableism around Blind people and “driving” because autonomous vehicles are decidedly just that: autonomous. For the purpose of this piece, however, my focus is on the practical ramifications. To wit, if Waymo today affords me agency and autonomy in transport, having my own car tomorrow sends that concept into the stratosphere. I’ll turn 44 come September, so I may well be into my senior years by the time so-called “POVs” become feasible. I’ve long since made my peace with neither having the ability to get a license nor buy a car—but I still dream of it.

Waymo and Toyota want to turn my dream, and that of others like me, into a reality.

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Unity Announces Unity for Humanity Grant Winners, Including Honors for accessibility

San Francisco-based Unity earlier this week announced the 2025 winners of its Unity for Humanity Grant. The company’s announcement was shared in a blog post published on Monday and bylined by Kevin Truong, Unity’s senior program manager for grants.

According to Truong, this year Unity recognized 10 winners and 3 honorable mentions. The recipients spanned 9 countries, with the winning projects addressing “complex global challenges” which are aligned with the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

“We received a record number of applications, demonstrating the growing global demand for support in using real-time 3D to drive positive change,” Truong wrote of this year’s Unity for Humanity Grant. “To meet this increased demand, Unity’s Social Impact Team added an additional $100,000 to the prize pool from the Unity Charitable Fund, bringing the total to $600,000 USD. Funding can be allocated towards the development of the project, building a working prototype, or marketing and distribution.”

Amongst the honorees are apps made for accessibility. One such winner, Jubilee Studios’ Small Talk ASL App, is educational software aimed at teaching American Sign Language (ASL). Unity describes Small Talk ASL as featuring “high quality animation and interactive gameplay [which opens] a door for children and adults, both hearing and Deaf, to communicate in ASL.” Moreover, Unity said Small Talk ASL is a “visually captivating project with a clear social impact,” adding Jubilee Studios nabbed Unity’s all-new Judges’ Choice Award for “receiving the highest marks from this year’s judges.”

Other winners include Benvision: Melody Meets Mobility, which uses spatial audio cues in order to enable Blind and low vision people to independently move about their world, and was a finalist and honorable mention last year. And Prosthetics Beyond Borders is a mixed-reality platform which Truong says “[uses] gamification, VR, and AI-driven simulations to help individuals with disabilities adapt to assistive technologies like prosthetic hands and legs.” Unity lauded the app as a “truly impressive medical innovation that helps individuals use their prosthetic limbs,” adding Prosthetics Beyond Borders offers “customizable training, interactive games, and real-world scenarios to enhance motor skills, confidence, and mental well-being.” Unity also noted the app endeared judges due to it being “inclusive and accessible” because it serves disabled people who live in rural and war-torn areas where support is scarce.

Unity is a widely-used cross-platform game engine, debuting at WWDC 2005. The software is also used by Google for its DeepMind projects, from which Gemini grew.

Prosthetics Beyond Borders uses Unity for its underlying infrastructure.

“We are using Unity to develop both the MyoLink solution and our VR training platform. Unity is integral to our project as it enables us to create interactive, immersive environments for prosthetic training and real-time muscle feedback,” Mohamed Dhaouafi, CEO of Cure Bionics, said about his company’s winning app in a statement for Unity’s announcement. “For MyoLink, Unity helps visualize muscle signals and provide real-time biofeedback, enhancing the training experience. For the VR solution, Unity is used to design realistic simulations that help users practice adapting to prosthetic devices in diverse environments, improving mobility, confidence, and independence.”

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Netflix Adds ‘Dialogue-Only Captions’ Option for Even more accessible Binge-Watching

My friend Emma Roth at The Verge reported last week that Netflix introduced a new subtitles captions option specifically designed to only display spoken dialogue. The Bay Area-based company describes the feature as a “new way to experience subtitles.”

Roth notes the dialogue-only captions are available exclusively in English for Netflix originals for now, but noted a Netflix spokesperson confirmed to The Verge the company is “actively exploring ways to expand this option to existing titles over time.”

According to Netflix, 50% of Americans watch content with captions or subtitles “most of the time”; in fact, the company said “it’s a habit we see reflected on Netflix too,” as it said “nearly half” of all viewing hours in the United States happen with either captions or subtitles. That data, Netflix said, was the driving force behind what it called “making the experience even better for members.” Netflix says its new dialogue-only caption feature is debuting with the release of the fifth and final season of the thriller series You.

David Pogue wrote about the ever-growing use of captions for CBS News last year.

The dialogue-only mode should, in theory, make watching stuff on Netflix more accessible to those who are hearing and thus don’t need the bracketed metadata with descriptions of ambient sounds. Likewise, focusing on only dialogue can make action easier to follow for those with visual and/or intellectual conditions because the option lacks the aforementioned extraneous detail that adds complexity and cognitive clutter.

The advent of Netflix’s dialogue-only captions comes soon after the company announced a “more multilingual” experience with expanded localization. And yes, once more with feeling, I must point out that captions and subtitles are not one and the same.

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Recent Meta Ray-Bans Updates make smart glasses Even more alluring for accessibility

Meta late last week announced several updates to its Ray-Ban smart glasses that the Menlo Park-based tech titan says gives the eyewear “new styles and AI updates.” The Spring-focused updates are intended to “supercharge the season,” according to Meta.

While everyone cares about fashion and style, aesthetics aren’t what piqued my interest here. What caught my eye—no pun intended—was the software side of the upgrade story. The headlining feature is Meta’s Live Translation functionality, previously available only in “early access,” is rolling out to everyone. Live Translation is localized in English, French, Italian, and Spanish, with Meta noting “when you’re speaking to someone in one of those languages, you’ll hear what they say in your preferred language through the glasses in real time, and they can view a translated transcript of the conversation on your phone.” Live Translation works even in airplane mode.

Elsewhere, Meta reports Ray-Ban wearers soon will have the ability to send and receive DMs and more from Instagram, which complements existing capabilities through Messenger and WhatsApp. Regarding music, Meta says the Ray-Ban glasses now support expanded access to services like Apple Music, Spotify, and others. Users can ask Meta AI to play a specific song or playlist right from their glasses, with the caveat “as long as your default language is set to English,” according to Meta. What’s more, Meta says users in the United States and Canada will gain the ability to converse with Meta AI right from their sunglasses. Meta’s smart assistant has the ability to “see what you see continuously and converse with you more naturally.” Lastly, Meta says beginning this week, users will able to talk with Meta AI about what it is they’re seeing, replete with real-time responses. This feature is spiritually very similar to Google Lens.

Meta sent me a pair of the original Ray-Bans a couple years ago, which I wrote about alongside Amazon’s Echo Frames. It’s admittedly been some time since I wore either pair with regularity—especially since, in the case of the Echo Frames, I don’t wade knee-deep in the Alexa ecosystem. The Ray-Bans are more agnostic in their allegiances. Nonetheless, I treated both devices much like the inexpensive (and dumb) drugstore sunglasses I’ve bought for years: I wear them to keep the sun out of my eyes.

As someone who is deep in the Apple ecosystem, I’m hearted by this weekend’s news Apple’s Ray-Bans competitor reportedly is “getting closer to becoming a reality.” According to Apple scoopster extraordinaire Mark Gurman of Bloomberg, the company’s glasses aren’t “close to being ready yet,” but writes the idea behind them is to “turn the glasses into an Apple Intelligence device [by analyzing] the surrounding environment and feed information to the wearer, though it will stop well short of true augmented reality.” Apple’s smart glasses would be right up my alley as someone who’s all-in on its ecosystem and, even more crucially, its support for accessibility.

Apple’s aspirations mirror what Meta does with its Ray-Bans, and is fascinating to ponder from an accessibility standpoint. Take the Live Translation functionality, for example. It can be way more accessible to hear aural translations of language in a hands-free way; this could be important for people with limited motor skills who might have trouble holding their iPhone to, say, use Apple’s Translate app to make the conversion(s). Likewise, using smart glasses can make navigation much more accessible largely due to its hands-free nature. You needn’t have to look down at your phone as you hold it to know where you’re going. There are other applications, but suffice it to say, smart glasses flash a ton of potential as an assistive technology.

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Why Choosing Prepared Garlic is a ‘curb cut’ to greater accessibility in the kitchen

This piece is only loosely tech-related, but does fit nicely with the “curb cuts” theme.

Last night, I came across a video on YouTube (embedded below) from one of my favorite creators in Kenji López-Alt. He demonstrates various ways to prep garlic, as well as discusses whether prepared garlic—be it pre-peeled or pre-chopped—is worth one’s investment at the supermarket. López-Alt’s video is good as usual: informative and unpretentious. His takeaway on the prepped garlic options, however, is what inspired this article. López-Alt advises that, although pre-chopped garlic will work in recipes, he doesn’t recommend using it. It lacks the punchiness inherent to freshly-chopped garlic.

As someone who’s an ascribed lifelong foodie, and as someone who was accepted to culinary school many moons ago, I’m of two minds about López-Alt’s video. On one side, I get the predisposition to preferring fresh ingredients because the logic dictates fresher is better. There is no question peeling and chopping garlic will lend better flavor to dishes than any of the convenient alternatives—even the pre-peeled cloves, since as López-Alt notes, manufacturers first blanch the garlic to make the papery skin easier to remove. On the other side, however, what López-Alt’s recommendations (predictably) miss is, of course, accessibility. In a disability context, the reality is not every disabled person who likes to cook is able to prep garlic the “proper” way you learn at the aforementioned culinary school. Maybe someone has limited dexterity in their hands. Maybe they have low muscle tone. Maybe they’re arthritic. As to the pre-peeled garlic from well-known companies such as Christopher Ranch, I’ve given serious consideration to paying a premium for it at the grocery store due to my own lackluster fine-motor skills. While I intellectually know how to break apart the cloves from the head and get the skins off, my fingers—not to mention my low vision—oftentimes won’t cooperate in getting the mise en place all ready timely and efficiently. Thus, pre-peeled garlic would prove a more accessible alternative whilst still being a relatively fresh product. To choose it isn’t about laziness or taking a shortcut. It’s about accessibility.

Accessibility is crucial—and too often authorities like López-Alt just gloss over it.

Despite being a lifelong foodie, it’s always struck me how ableist the food industry writ large can be in its mindset. Chefs preaching the gospel about making everything homemade because it tastes better and it’s “easy” to do. Likewise, these same chefs write cookbooks and do television shows in which they claim “everyone” can make meals in 15 or 30 minutes. Again, the food nerd in me understands the messaging being telegraphed with both sentiments. The problem is, of course, these ideals utterly fail at acknowledging that (a) not everyone is literally able to prep and cook; and (b) more practically, not everyone has a kitchen wherein they can comfortably prep and cook their food. It’s not realistic; it’s predicated on the notion most people aren’t disabled.

And yet, disabled people are human and need to eat for sustenance like anyone else.

(To be clear, I’m not at all insinuating López-Alt is ableist. I’m saying the food world is.)

The fact of the matter is the ostensibly convenient pre-prepped garlic options that López-Alt explored are lifesavers in terms of accessibility. They may be the only option for disabled garlic lovers (like me). The tradeoff is clear—lesser flavor for usability’s sake—but those are the choices people must make because pre-prepped garlic is as inclusive as it is convenient. To put it in technological terms, using, for instance, the bags of pre-peeled garlic for accessibility is akin to using my Apple devices at maximum brightness. The obvious consequence of my choice is worse battery life, and I’m cognizant of such a Faustian bargain, but my vision requires the brightest screens in order for my iPhone and iMac to be accessible in everyday use. Period. Full stop. Fin.

Personally, I won’t ever buy jarred pre-chopped garlic—but someone else may need it!

But I’ll absolutely get the pre-peeled stuff for accessibility reasons, taste be damned.

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Apple’s Shoutout to AirPods Pro Hearing aids more meaningful than mere Marketing

While taking a break from my inbox this afternoon, I came across this post on X from my pal Mark Gurman of Bloomberg in which he shares news Apple today pushed a redesigned Health section of its site. The header, stylized with a color-shifting gradient in the background, features the tagline “Meaningful insights. Backed by science.”

What compels me to report on this ostensibly ho-hum change is Apple’s callout of its hearing health features in AirPods Pro 2. The software, which debuted alongside Apple Intelligence last October within iOS 18.1, includes a clinical-grade hearing test which enable AirPods Pro to act as an over-the-counter hearing aid. The timing was fortuitous, as the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) announced a month earlier it authorized what it called the “first over-the-counter hearing aid software” for Apple’s earbuds.

“About 1.5 billion people around the world are living with hearing loss—and millions are unaware that they’re affected by it,” Apple’s marketing copy reads on its redesigned Health page. “To help you better understand your hearing and make caring for it more accessible, our medical and audio specialists worked together to develop an end-to-end hearing health experience for AirPods Pro 2.”

The company notes over 150,000 “real-world audiograms and millions of simulations” were used in developing the hearing test on iPhone and AirPods Pro.

Two things are simultaneously true about Apple’s new Health webpage:

  1. It’s an opportunity for product marketing; and

  2. It’s an opportunity to highlight the accessibility gains of using said product.

To the first statement, of course Greg Joswiak and Tor Myhren’s teams would seize yet another chance to hawk Apple’s wares. That’s literally part of the executives’ job description. To deride the new Health page as nothing but a pure marketing ploy is cynical and disingenuous because it implies the obvious—a for-profit business wanting to make money—is somehow icky or immoral. This point ties into the second statement, which is eminently relevant from a disability perspective. To wit, while one can acknowledge the marketing machinations at work, it’s also important to acknowledge the gravity of said marketing. This sentiment isn’t trivial; despite Apple being strident in their messaging that the AirPods’ hearing aids are intended for only those who cope with mild-to-moderate hearing loss, that the company is making more inroads on accessibility vis-a-vis the hearing aid market is a highly non-trivial development.

Apple is a pretty big and influential corporation nowadays, in case you haven’t heard.

Blake Cadwell, co-founder and CEO of Soundly, told me so in an interview last year.

“There are very few brands that can transform public opinion and actions in the way that Apple does,” he said of the significance of AirPods Pro becoming bonafide hearing aids. “The hearing feature in AirPods Pro marks a milestone in culture’s acceptance of hearing aids and hearing loss as a more normal part of daily life. The World Health Organization estimates that, by 2050, 1 in every 10 people will have disabling hearing loss. It’s something that also affects me personally. My own journey with hearing loss is what led to the creation of Soundly along with a deep sense of wanting to help others going through a similar process that can often feel frustrating and confusing.”

Even more pointedly, Cadwell continued by saying Apple’s then-newfound hearing aid feature has profound potential to “undoubtedly encourage more people to start their hearing journey now, rather than waiting another year—or even ten.”

Besides AirPods Pro sales, that notion of encouragement is exactly what Apple’s new Health page is built to bolster. Consider this: It’s highly plausible someone in the market for a hearing aid may be delighted to discover the AirPods Pro they already use every day to listen to music and podcasts are capable—and appropriate—in helping them hear better. That notion means something; it’s a testament to the gravity of highlighting an accessibility feature to the mainstream—whether during the holidays or right now.

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How The Air Out App makes attaining Emotional ‘Instant Relief’ accessible to All

The Air Out app, available on iOS and Android, strikes me as a personalized version of the similar-in-scope Blind for professionals. On its website, Air Out describes itself in part as enabling people to “vent, confess, and even brag in the six themed chat areas—without any debate!” Air Out says it’s fast, effective, and provides users “instant relief.”

Air Out’s six spaces are named Moms, Dads, Work, Love, Vent, and Brag.

“Think of it as a virtual diary of sorts: [it’s] a place to vent, confess, and brag privately,” Courtney Stanfield, Air Out’s founder, said in describing the app during a recent interview with me. “What we don’t say, we store in our bodies; a small negative thought can quickly build, leaving you feeling weighed down, bad about yourself, and stuck. When you give thoughts and feelings a place to go you are freeing yourself, instantly. It is a quick and effective tool for keeping your peace when emotions run high.”

Stanfield, a mother to three children and a longtime Canadian broadcaster who’s the weekend weather anchor in two major cities, explained to me Air Out’s origin story traces back to its beginnings as an outlet for parents. Air Out’s original conceit was to, according to Stanfield, “help parents with the struggles of raising kids” but which quickly widened its aperture so as to be accommodating of everyone. Air Out’s target demographic is people ages 13 and older, with Stanfield saying the software is “a helpful tool for anyone and everyone wanting to feel more peaceful, confident, and at ease during their day.” Brevity and concision drive Air Out’s posting, as the app has a 100-character limit with language filters in place. Notably, there are zero mechanisms for liking or commenting on posts; in this sense, Air Out is the “anti-social media” app of sorts. Users are able to view their previous posts, but that’s it. Air Out is for the user.

“The idea came to me in a dream and I started emailing app development companies in the middle of the night because the vision was so profound,” Stanfield said to me in describing where Air Out’s roots lie. “I want to help people help themselves, and this is an easy way to stop feeling stuck, stop being impacted by the thoughts that aren’t even yours. Our thoughts are often just a byproduct of our emotional and energetic state, not a reflection of us. When you ‘green light’ the thoughts you wouldn’t feel comfortable sharing for fear of judgement, giving them a place to go, you make space in your body and mind. With anonymity, we are all equal and safe to express ourselves freely.”

Stanfield conceded making Air Out “has been a huge learning experience and leap of faith as this is completely out of my wheelhouse. She leapt into app development because “nothing like [Air Out] exists” and she wanted to help people “feel better.” She added she’s a “firm believer” in the idea of “being able to separate from your thoughts and not buying into the criticisms, self-doubt, and frustration we all experience.”

Air Out has been out only a few months, with Stanfield continually amazed at how she, with the help of a software development firm, is a developer. “It’s not where I thought life would take me,” she said, “but I am very excited to be here and see how it grows!”

At its core, Air Out is all about accessibility. Stanfield said as much, telling me that by providing an anonymized safe space where one can speak their mind without fear of neither judgment nor retribution, “you are safe to express yourself freely and are allowing the weight of them to fall off your shoulders.” Stanfield’s sentiments are of particular poignance to the disability community. Already a group casted away to live at the margin’s margin societally, it can be difficult, if not downright impossible, to talk about things such as systemic ableism without the aforementioned fears of judgment and reprisal. This is not at all trivial, as talking about disability (and disability inclusion) is oftentimes fraught with emotional and logistical landmines. In a world where not an insignificant number of people without disabilities characterize being disabled as a fate worse than death, take it from me: it can be hard to bite one’s tongue and not say everything you want to say out of fear of the reaction. Given this context, a place like Air Out is an outlet to share those thoughts and feelings in an anonymized environment. In essence, Air Out can be a conduit through which a disabled person—or anyone else, really—can attain some measure of better mental health by baring their soul to no one.

Air Out’s testimonials speak to that ideal. One user, Jess C, said in part it has been “a lifesaver” and lauded the ability to “vent without worrying about anyone judging me.”

As to the future for Air Out, Stanfield is hopeful more people try it. The app exists, she said, “so you can make space in your life to feel lighter,” while noting early feedback centers on “how great it felt to say someone out loud, how freeing it is to actually say the things you wouldn’t say to anyone, and how refreshing it is to see we are not alone.”

Long-term, Stanfield believes Air Out has potential to become a “revolutionary space.”

“I hope the word continues to spread about the app and it lands in the right hands of the right people to help it grow,” she said of Air Out’s prospects for the future.

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National hockey League Earns Sports Emmy Nominations for ‘NHL × ASL’ Telecasts, More

NHL.com columnist Nicholas J. Cotsonika reported earlier this month about the National Hockey League (NHL) garnering 9 Sports Emmy nominations this year. One of those nominations is for the league’s production work on its “NHL × ASL” broadcasts.

The NHL describes the “NHL × ASL” as “an alternate telecast dedicated completely to the Deaf community using American Sign Language.” The broadcasts are co-produced with the team at Deaf inclusion company PXP. The “NHL × ASL” telecast is available exclusively on ESPN+ in the United States and on SportsNet+ in Canada. For its part, PXP describes its mission on its website as advocating for the “access, inclusion, and representation in professional sports for Deaf and hard-of-hearing sports fans.”

“We were just blown away by how the [“NHL × ASL”] took off,” Steve Mayer, the NHL’s president of content and events,” said to Cotsonika. “We’ve always felt like this was so unique and so valuable and meaningful. To be recognized, for a lot of people who put in some spectacular amounts of work, this is just an amazing, amazing accomplishment.”

If the “NHL × ASL” rings a bell, it should. I’ve covered it extensively over the last year or so, having sat down virtually last year with founder and chief executive officer Brice Christianson for an interview about partnering with the NHL to bring the “NHL × ASL” broadcasts to life. Christianson is, like yours truly, a CODA and explained to me in part it’s a “dream come true” to work alongside such an “incredible” partner like the NHL.

“This [partnership with the NHL] has been a partnership that has evolved over the past couple of years,” Christianson told me last year. “It’s a blueprint on how sports teams and leagues can operate with an authentic allyship lens. It’s a blueprint on how access does not have to be complicated. There’s a lot of time that goes into it. Oftentimes it’s restructuring the system, but it really does come down to just communication, belief, and execution. Like I said, I’m not here without the NHL… guaranteed.”

ESPN and TNT, TV partners of the league, nabbed 7 and 2 nominations, respectively.

The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences announced the nominees earlier this month. The 46th annual event is slated for May 20 at New York City’s Lincoln Center.

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Using AI to build wordPress sites shows How AI makes web work more accessible

Umar Shakir reported for The Verge earlier this month about WordPress.com launching an AI-powered site builder in “early access.” According to Shakir, the new tool is able to “construct your WordPress webpage, including fully written text, layout, generated images, and more,” with WordPress itself boasting the new software can “make beautiful, functional websites in minutes.” Shakir caveats the AI site builder can neither create e-commerce sites nor those with “complex integrations.” But fear not: according to WordPress, the AI site builder will see these jobs come to them over time.

“It takes your input and instantly creates a fully designed, content-ready WordPress website, complete with text, layouts, and images, for you,” WordPress says of its AI-powered site builder software. “Just you and your vision, with AI handling the rest.”

WordPress posted a video demonstrating the site builder to YouTube.

WordPress’ new site builder is notable from an accessibility standpoint in that it shines more light on the notion that artificial intelligence has profound potential to do genuine good for people. A person with disabilities who may have fine-motor delays, for instance, that limits their use of a mouse and keyboard very well could find the WordPress site builder a more accessible avenue to build their website(s). Instead of clicking-and-dragging elements around (like in Squarespace, for example) and/or writing a lot of HTML/CSS code, they instead can type out a few sentences with prompts for what they want to AI to do for them. Likewise, it’s highly plausible building a website goes beyond the ken of someone with certain cognitive conditions, as there’s a good degree of complexity in what-you-see-is-what-you-get tools such as the aforementioned Squarespace. That someone with intellectual disabilities harnesses AI in this manner isn’t a “cheat code” or lazy; on the contrary, it shows how AI can be a true assistive technology for those who need the help. Like with chatbots in ChatGPT or Gemini helping do research for school essays, to use AI for, in this case, building websites, should be applauded and recognized for its shrewdness rather than lament its laziness. The salient point is not everyone can create websites—or do research—in the traditional ways, no matter how tried-and-true they may be for the mainstream.

Although Curb Cuts (and my portfolio page) are built atop Squarespace, my old blog was hosted on WordPress—first the dot-com, then the self-hosted version. The reason I moved to Squarespace was (a) I have friends whose podcasts have them as a sponsor; and (b) I grew tired of self-hosting and wanted something easy yet equally robust and nice-looking. Squarespace checks those boxes for me, as it’s easy to click-and-drag elements and customize things, yet flexible enough to indulge my nerdy side and allow me to pop open the proverbial hood and tinker with code-level changes. In fact, I did this just recently to Curb Cuts regarding CSS customization. What’s more, I ran into a couple situations where I needed answers to questions; rather than comb Google for umpteenth GitHub and Reddit threads, I asked Gemini to provide me with some code, which I copy-and-pasted into my CMS. Not only did I add some cool bits of branding to the site, but I did it accessibly with help from my newly-preferred generative AI chatbot.

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An Ode is Owed To Apple Sports

Zac Hall at 9to5 Mac reported this week Apple updated its Apple Sports app with a new social feature the company calls Game Card Sharing. The update, he writes, comes just in time for Sunday’s F1 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. The race can be seen on ESPN, ESPN+, and F1 TV. To date, Apple Sports remains (frustratingly) exclusive to iOS and the iPhone.

“Game Card Sharing generates dynamic game cards, not just static game stats, for any league supported by Apple Sports,” Hall said in describing the newly-announced functionality in Apple Sports. “These cards can be shared directly from Apple Sports over iMessage or on social media for events that are live, upcoming, or completed.”

I’m happy to report it surely didn’t take long for Apple Sports to become one of my most favorite, and oft-used, apps since it debuted in February of last year. My pal and peer Jason Snell at Six Colors posted an interview with Apple services chief Eddy Cue when the app came out, with Cue telling Snell in part the raison d'être for building Apple Sports is because “I just want to get the damn score of the game.” He added Apple sought to make Apple Sports “the best scores app that you could possibly make.”

That last sentiment feels not the least bit blustery; Apple Sports is damn good. As a diehard sports fan, the app has made keeping track of, say, the Giants, 49ers, and Warriors more accessible (and enjoyable!) to me. I love the design of the app—the aforementioned Game Cards are beautiful and the scores are presented with large digits—while also enjoying how the Game Cards has detailed information like stats and more. If I had one complaint, it’s that the logistical info—venue, start time, and TV listings—are way down at the bottom of the Game Card. Such pertinent information should be on top, in my opinion—especially given Apple thought it fitting to include a “Open in tv” button in that space. Moreover, Apple Sports shines particularly brightly if you, like me, have an iPhone with a Dynamic Island. Keeping tabs of my favorite teams are made even more accessible; so much so, in fact, that I would never consider an iPhone like the 16e, which omits the Dynamic Island. Apple Sports exemplifies a point a made to another Apple executive in Alan Dye, who leads the company’s famed industrial design group. I spoke with him for a few minutes in the hands-on area in Steve Jobs Theater after the iPhone 14 press event in September 2022. My biggest piece of feedback was emphasizing how the Dynamic Island could make tracking things like kitchen timers and, in this case, sports scores more accessible than hopping from app to app. Apple Sports is an exemplar of that notion. Live Activities is a great feature/API.

All this praise I’ve heaped onto Apple Sports thus far is, while merited, doesn’t mean the app is beyond reproach. It’s not! Every time I see a story about Apple Sports getting an update, as I did this week, I wait with bated breath to see if Apple has brought the app to the iPad. It kills me, some 18 months later, that Apple Sports still isn’t there yet. I could technically use the iPhone app on iPadOS, but I’d rather have a native app. This is much in the same vein as how I’d rather use native Mac apps than resort to web apps in Safari.

Call me a snob, but I simply prefer native apps to web apps most of the time.

At this point, Instagram may release its unicorn iPad app before Apple Sports gets one.

Another bit of criticism for Apple Sports is the incessant banner ad in the app I see for MLS Season Pass. I like the league, and I’ve thought about signing up, but it feels intrusive and distasteful to put an ad in a place with ostensibly such a narrow focus.

Anyway, go to the App Store and get Apple Sports if you haven’t already. It’s the best.

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Beats’ New Colored USB-C Cables Illustrate that Color is more than Merely Cosmetic

My pal Chance Miller reported for 9to5 Mac earlier this week about Beats announcing its first-ever line of USB-C cables. The company bills the new cables as “[a] collection of reinforced charging cables in an assortment of lengths and colors,” according to Miller. A single cable costs $19, while a 2-pack costs $35. The cables are available now.

According to Miller, Beats’ colorful new cables come in several varieties: USB-C to USB-C, USB-A to USB-C, and USB-C to Lightning. The color choices are Bolt Black, Surge Stone, Nitro Navy, and Rapid Red. Notably, the red variety USB-A to USB-C (1.5 m) and USB-C to Lightning (1.5 m) aren’t available until “this summer,” according to Beats.

Beats has shared an introductory video for the new accessories.

What’s most interesting to me about this development is not merely that there now exists Beats-branded cables—not exactly billboard-worthy products—it’s that these cables are colorful. From an accessibility standpoint, that the cables are colored means they have very real potential to be an accessibility aid in helping someone distinguish which cables go to what. For instance, someone with certain cognitive conditions—or anyone, really—might plausibly decide the aforementioned red USB-C cable is to be used strictly for their iPhone charging. Likewise, that same person could decide the blue cable is for charging their Apple TV’s Siri Remote. The permutations are endless, but the salient point is only that the colorful nature of these cables could very well be a de-facto accessibility feature for identifying the devices to which they’re attached. In this sense, the colors are far more impactful in actual use than sheer stylistic symbols.

As other illustrations of this concept, consider color-coded HDMI cables on Amazon. The whole point of making them colorful is more about pragmatism than prettiness. For those who have lots of devices hooked up to their TV, these colored HDMI cables can go a long way in knowing, for instance, that the Apple TV 4K is connected via the yellow cable while the PlayStation 5 is running through the blue one. Similarly, colored ethernet cables do the same job. I recently tore apart our home theater setup, then summarily rebuilt it, on a quest for simplification and to conquer a massive rat’s nest of unused cables. I have a gigabit Ethernet switch running off the back of our Eero system, which runs cables to the Apple TV, Starling Home Hub, and HDHomeRun. Everything works with aplomb, but the trouble is I sometimes can’t tell which cable connects to what device. Ergo, color-coded Ethernet cables would make that more accessible.

As one last example, my keychain is colored for accessibility’s sake. It’s an official AirTag Leather Key Ring in the California Poppy color. This product has long been discontinued, and yellow isn’t even my favorite color, but I specifically chose it because it’s bold and bright—both attributes which would make grabbing my keys more visually accessible as someone with low vision. (Apple replaced the Leather Key Ring with a FineWoven version that’s both visually and functionally nigh identical to what I have.)

Beyond colors, Miller reports Beats’ cables feature an “anti-fray design” engineered by Apple. He notes the cables have undergone what is described by Apple as “thousands of hours of testing.” The cables are designed for charging, syncing, data transfer, audio, and CarPlay. Of note, fast charging is supported on select iPhone and iPad models.

I’m compelled to point out Beats’ cables are a bit of a double-edged sword. As I’ve written innumerable times, USB-C cables, however standardized, are fairly inaccessible in terms of hand-eye coordination. The nerds all clamor for One Cable To Rule Them All, but they fail to realize—because they take it for granted—that cable oneness is only truly meaningful if you can manipulate the cable in the first place. Not everyone can easily do this; it would be more innovative to, say, fuse MagSafe with USB-C. And lest anyone cries proprietary, as someone who’s chosen the Apple ecosystem, I’ll take a USB-C cable slathered with the company’s special sauce if it means the cables are more inclusive of my needs. Miss me with the precious pearl-clutching over standards.

The news of Beats-branded cables comes months after the company surprisingly released branded cases (made out of plastic) for the then-new iPhone 16 lineup.

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How The ‘Fridge to bridge the world’ Makes medicinal transport More accessible to all

The Earth Prize describes itself as “the world’s largest environmental competition for young people” ages 13–19. It has seen participation from innovators spanning 150 countries, with its stated goal being to “inspire and empower the next generation of environmental leaders and innovators, creating a global platform for sharing and scaling their solutions.” Beginning this year, The Earth Prize is giving $12,500 to winners representing seven regions: Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, North America, Central & South America, and Oceania. In addition, The Earth Prize is recognizing three Mentors and three Educators of the Year, with each honoree receiving a $2,500 prize.

In what it said is “a bid to improve healthcare accessibility and energy disparity,” The Earth Prize has announced the Asia winners of this year’s awards is Thermavault. The Earth Prize describes the device as “a first-of-its-kind, electricity-free refrigeration unit for medical supply transport in remote areas, using reusable salt-based reactions.” The trio behind Thermavault in Dhruv Chaudhary, Mithran Ladhania, and Mridul Jain, call their invention “a fridge to bridge the world.” The young men who designed and developed Thermavault are students at the Shishukunj International School at Indore.

In a brief interview conducted earlier this month via videoconference, Ladhania and his co-creators explained to me “we’re all from families which have medical backgrounds,” adding that context “was indeed a part of what led us to develop Thermavault and target the supply of medical transport.” He said work on Thermavault began only recently when, in November of last year, the friends took part in a science fair at their school involving a project that created a cooling system which could replace conventional air conditioners. The system, Ladhania said, would be “about 40% more efficient” than standard AC units. That technology triggered a brainstorm: using the concept, scaled down to the size of a smallish box, to swap out air conditioners for refrigerators instead. The idea, Ladhania told me, would be to use the cooling system in fridges specifically designed to transport medication such as vaccines. As The Earth Prize is an environmentally-oriented endeavor, Ladhania said the main problem is most medical fridges require enormous amounts of electricity to function properly, which is problematic in rural parts of the world that doesn’t see a steady stream of reliable electricity—if at all—due to a lack of the infrastructure needed for delivery. There are concerns around pollution and subsequent environmental degradation. The team seized an opportunity to fill “a gap that needs to be addressed,” Ladhania said.

According to Ladhania, 1.2 billion people worldwide live without access to electricity. Besides missing out on basic things like the internet, the lack of power spells trouble for medicinal transport for those who need it; Ladhania said a standard refrigerator isn’t viable because there’s no electricity, while a single-use fridge is wasteful and not reusable. You’d need electricity anyway to make more ice. Enter Thermavault, which for people who live without access to electricity, is a lifeline to critical medication(s). The device, Ladhania told me, is marketed as “a reusable, environmentally-friendly cooling alternative for vaccine storage.” It isn’t solely a solution for moving vaccines—it can be applied to other medications requiring cold to remain viable for maximal efficiency.

"While our major pitching point has been about vaccines, we do see other use cases,” Ladhania said. “Thermavault is applicable for transport of any medical supply which requires a very specific temperature range of either 0° to 10° Celsius or subzero temperatures. In the future, we do think Thermavault has potential to be scaled up to a model that could maybe even tackle storing food supplies or be used as an industrial cooling solution. As of now, our major focus has been on helping people in need [and] people suffering from that energy disparity… we try to bridge that gap in the world.”

It’s these sentiments about helping people in need that carry the most resonance from an accessibility standpoint. While the technological and engineering aspects of Thermavault are undoubtedly impressive, what struck me when deciding to cover Thermavault was its potential effects on the disability community. To wit, there surely are people with disabilities living in rural areas across the continents. Many very likely need some sort of life-sustaining medication. For these people, then, Thermavault has the capacity to be a literal lifesaver insofar as the device can deliver said medication(s) in a safe and efficient manner. These people need medication, whether they have electricity or not. Thermavault is a solution reflective of that reality. In this sense, that Thermavault is built with an environmental consciousness, what with its salt packets, is beside the point. It’s the proverbial icing on the cake. At its core, Thermavault is an assistive technology built for accessibility and, ultimately, the betterment of society.

When asked about feedback on Thermavault, the team told me one of the greatest, most validating experience of Thermavault’s development was getting the opportunity to field-test the product in order to test its efficacy. It was invaluable for the team to use what was a “basic prototype” not solely in a controlled, pristine lab setting but also within an “erratic environment” in the real world. Moreover, Thermavault was tested in a hospital over a three-week period and garnered positive reviews from workers there. Ladhania said the hospital staff came away “rather impressed” by the device’s capabilities, adding they were especially taken by “the possibility of how the reward could potentially transform a simple problem that they face on a day-to-day basis.”

“[Thermavault was] pretty well-received by the medical industry,” he said.

Looking towards the future, the team told me they “look forward” to getting Thermavault certified by regulatory bodies, telling me they’d like to begin the process with local governments. Longer-term, the team aspires to work its way up the proverbial ladder to spark talks with the Indian government and maybe even organizations such as the venerable World Health Organization. Certification, they told me, aligns with their collective vision on scaling Thermavault. Ladhania said the team feels Thermavault “can have great international impact.” And with the Earth Prize earnings, the team hopes to use a portion of the money to patent its technology.

The Earth Prize is overseen by the eponymously-named Earth Foundation, a Switzerland-based nonprofit. The Foundation describes its mission as “dedicated to inspiring, educating, mentoring, and empowering students and young entrepreneurs to address environmental challenges with innovative ideas.” The Earth Prize, alongside the Earth Foundation Alliance, are “flagship initiatives” intended to “foster an ecosystem that accelerates positive change toward environmental sustainability.”

Voting for The Earth Prize’s 2025 Global Winner is open until Earth Day on April 22.

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Steven Aquino Steven Aquino

How Orangetheory Fitness Makes getting Buff more accessible to this deaf gym Rat

Today’s more than Tax Day and Jackie Robinson Day. Today’s also National ASL Day.

National ASL Day is special for Jason Wagner. Wagner, who was born Deaf and raised in New York City, lives in Indiana with his wife Vanessa and their two children. Deeply involved with his community, Wagner serves on various boards and committees dedicated to advancing accessibility and advocacy for the Deaf and hard-of-hearing community. Professionally, Wagner is a national sales director for Video Relay Services.

He’s also a gym rat, being a member of Orangetheory Fitness (OTF).

Originally joining OTF before the pandemic hit in 2020, Wagner went away for a few years before returning to the brand in August 2024. In a recent interview conducted over email, Wagner told me he’s always valued health and fitness—beyond OTF, Wagner enjoys running marathons, taking on endurance challenges, and more—and was “so glad” to come back to OTF. The gym, he said, has helped take his fitness journey to “a whole new level.” More pointedly, what’s most endearing about OTF to Wagner is how accessible the company has made it for him in order to participate as a Deaf person.

“Orangetheory stands out to me because of its structured format and visual coaching, which makes it more accessible for Deaf individuals like me,” Wagner said to me about what makes OTF stand out in his experiences. “For example, the OTconnect heart rate monitoring system offers real-time feedback, and the workout stations are straightforward and easy to follow. More importantly, Orangetheory makes me feel included. It’s a space where I can interact with others, challenge myself and feel part of a supportive community. I anticipated that communication might be a challenge at first, but in the same way this community has supported me through fitness, I’ve seen the coaches and staff also support me by learning and adapting—and that makes a huge difference. Orangetheory offers more than just a great workout by providing a sense of connection and encouragement that keeps me motivated to reach new goals.”

Wagner’s local OTF location has allowed him to cultivate strong interpersonal relationships, all of which have enriched his experience there. Navigating a group fitness environment for a Deaf person can be challenging, if not downright intimidating, but Wagner connected with a coach at OTF who had a background in speaking ASL. This made Wagner feel more at ease and included in the group. Likewise, Wagner connected with a fellow member named Rob, who also has a background in ASL. He grew up signing with his Deaf twin and provides interpretation for Wagner; the camaraderie has proven so strong that Wagner has introduced OTF to friends—and is even teaching ASL to coaches and other OTF members in an effort to fortify the bonds forged at the gym.

“I’ve also encouraged others in the Deaf community to try Orangetheory,” Wagner said of his evangelism of the company to newbies. “I truly believe it’s a great option for anyone looking for a structured, supportive workout environment.”

When asked about feedback, Wagner said staff at OTF has “always been open” to his comments and critiques. He’s suggested better accessibility by way of what he called “using clearer visual cues to ensuring staff understand Deaf communication needs.”

Looking towards the future, Wagner is hopeful more fitness spaces look to OTF and follow their lead in giving greater access to disabled people who want to get workouts in like anyone else. The importance of inclusion, Wagner told me, is crucial because everyone, regardless of one’s ability level, is entitled to “feel empowered to prioritize their health.” For his own personal sake, Wagner looks forward to “keep pushing my own limits by taking on more marathons and endurance challenges in the future.”

On its website, the purpose of National ASL Day is described as a time to “honor our unique heritage in ASL and open opportunities for our community through this holiday.” According to the California Commission on Disability Access, National ASL Day became officially recognized in the United States only recently, in 2019, after a congressional resolution by representatives Mark Takano (D-CA) and David Cicilline (D-RI). Furthermore, the Commission notes April 15th was chosen for National ASL Day to commemorate the anniversary of the 1817 opening of the American School for the Deaf.

“ASL is a tool for communication with its own grammar and cultural norms,” the Commission writes. “ASL Day honors the cultural diversity of Deaf communities and promotes understanding and inclusion for Deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals.”

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