week11y issue 7

Apologies for the slightly short and slightly late issue of week11y – I was off sick much of last week!

week11y is a weekly newsletter dedicated to all things accessibility, curated by developer @ChrisBAshton. Each resource is summarised as a TLDR, in case you don’t have time to read the actual article. Readers are encouraged to read the linked articles and form their own conclusions.

What to Do If You Think Your Child Is Color Blind

  • Around 1 in 10 males have some form of colour blindness – a much higher rate than that in women. It’s a genetic trait typically passed down from the mother. You can conduct Ishihara tests at home (online) to determine colour blindness. There is no cure but there are ways you can manage the condition, e.g. by labeling things rather than relying on colour alone.

Mattel releases first deck of UNO in Braille

  • The first official braille UNO deck is going to the Idaho School for the Deaf and the Blind. Some students have played it before but have needed to have teachers adapt existing sets by hand braille-ing them. The braille deck looks identical to the non-braille deck, but has some non-intrusive dots in the corner of each card. It makes you question why games companies don’t make their products braille-friendly by default.

‘No captions no vote’: why deaf voters are calling for more accessible campaigning this general election

  • Article by Liam O’Dell, highlighting that a lot of political campaign videos lack captions, making them inaccessible to the 11 million people in the UK (1/6 of the population) with deafness or hearing loss (not to mention that 85% of all videos on Facebook are watched without the sound on). This has triggered the #NoCaptionsNoVote campaign, where deaf people threaten not to vote for parties who don’t provide captions. Liam draws attention to the closure of the Access to Elected Office Fund, which affects deaf candidates standing to become MPs, who now have to fund their own costs such as interpreters. Finally, some but not all parties have published their policies in British Sign Language.
  • Bonus article: read How Philly is making all voting locations accessible for the first time ever (November 5th 2019). TDLR: all venues have been ‘accidentally’ made wheelchair accessible so that there was enough room for workers to erect the new (large) touchscreen voting machines.

Screen reader bug fixed in Firefox

  • In September 2018, GDS Accessibility Expert Anika Henke filed a bug report with Mozilla, suggesting that words are incorrectly merged together in screen readers when using word-wrap: break-word with a small width. For example, “posted on” is pronounced “postedon” if its container is so small that each letter is on its own line. The root cause was actually a 4 year old bug to do with trimming whitespace, which Firefox has fixed in its latest version (Firefox 71). You may be interested in alphagov/reported-bugs to see all bugs GDS has reported in browsers, operating systems and assistive tech. Meanwhile, well done all who take the time to report, debug and fix these far-reaching issues!

Did you know that you can subscribe to dai11y, week11y, fortnight11y or month11y updates! Every newsletter gets the same content; it is your choice to have short, regular emails or longer, less frequent ones. Curated with ♥ by developer @ChrisBAshton.

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