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4 votes
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Adventures with old worprocessors
7 votes -
Accessibility Week on The Verge
6 votes -
The tech industry's accessibility report card for 2021
4 votes -
High readability Wikipedia
9 votes -
Name don'ts
14 votes -
iPhone keyboard for blind to shut down as maker cites Apple abuse of developers
10 votes -
Blind people and advocates criticize AccessiBe, a company claiming to automatically make websites ADA compliant
10 votes -
This is "Not a Wheelchair" - Introducing the Rig
10 votes -
How to deal with a stupid email situation?
My spouse and I own a condo. The property management company that the home owners' association hired is generally mediocre (which is a huge step up from the usual scenario where most are actively...
My spouse and I own a condo. The property management company that the home owners' association hired is generally mediocre (which is a huge step up from the usual scenario where most are actively awful). They do a reasonably good job of keeping us informed, but they way they do it is hilariously bad. Every email they send is sent as a .jpg and a .docx file with no actual text in the message. My email client renders it and I can read it, but it makes all of their emails unsearchable, and it makes filtering beyond the basic "emails containing address x" impossible.
I've asked them personally several times both electronically and in writing to please stop sending such correspondence and just send a regular email. (I honestly don't care whether it's plain text or HTML, just so long as it's searchable and filterable.) But it's so far been to no avail. I brought it up at the last HOA meeting and they agreed to also include their messages as text in the body of the email, but they don't. If I'm really lucky they'll have one or two sentences in text, but the rest is a .jpg and a .docx (or .pdf) of the actual body of the message. I've tried to explain that this is bad for people with disabilities and may even run afoul of the Americans with Disabilities Act, but they didn't seem to care.
It's not clear to me how one ends up sending emails in this form. I don't use any Microsoft products, which they probably can't comprehend, but I suspect this is some sort of Windows thing. Does anyone know how this happens and why? And more importantly, does anyone have suggestions for getting them to stop?
14 votes -
Zach Talks Tech - Apple Watch Series 6 review
6 votes -
Teachers in Africa are using radio to keep remote learning affordable and accessible, since many households have no access to internet or a computer
7 votes -
How accessibility leads to better digital products for all customers
13 votes -
Netflix prepares to add an audio-only mode for background listening
13 votes -
Why accessibility is the future of tech
9 votes -
Devs of accessibility extension start group to lobby Google on extension devs rights after being removed from Chrome
9 votes -
Twitter starts rolling out audio tweets on iOS
7 votes -
A blind man couldn't order pizza from Domino's. The company wants the US Supreme Court to say websites don't have to be accessible
32 votes -
Companies are losing web cases: Spend money on web access, not lawyers
3 votes -
My colleague designed/engineered a hydraulic "Drop Down Truck" for wheelchair users
10 votes