Episode 2

Designers and Developers Need to Understand the Basics of Accessibility

Zack Klein, iSoftStone, Software Test Engineer II

Zack talks about his work as an accessibility tester and his unique perspective as a person who is totally blind. His love of technology helps him solve issues with the accessible content he relies on. He describes the tools he prefers including his Mac, iPhone and refreshable braille display.

Mentioned in this episode:

Info about Accessibility at Blink

Transcript
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(upbeat music)

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- Hello, this is Digital Accessibility

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the people behind the progress.

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I'm Joe Welinske the creator

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and host of this series.

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And as an accessibility professional myself

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I find it very interesting

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as to how others who found their way

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into this profession.

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So let's meet one of those people right now

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and hear about their journey.

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(upbeat music)

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All right, well we are back for another episode

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of this podcast about accessibility practitioners.

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And today I am pleased

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to be talking with Zack Kline.

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How are you Zack?

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- I'm doing well, thank you.

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How are you?

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- Oh, I'm doing really well

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and I've known you for a while now.

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I'm talking from my Vashon Island office

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which is near Blink Seattle headquarters.

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So where are you talking to us from?

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- Sammamish, Washington which is kinda east of Seattle, so.

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- Well it's good to have a chance to chat with you

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for the purpose of this podcast.

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And of course as I mentioned

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we've worked together at Blink

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with you assisting us

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with a number of projects as a consultant.

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And we come back to talk about that

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but what other activity are you involved with

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for work right now?

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- I'm a software test engineer.

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I work with a company called iSoftStone.

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I basically do lots and lots of testing

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for accessibility testing primarily

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for Microsoft in different,

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doing different, testing basically

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whatever they assign to us

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which can vary wildly.

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- Well yeah we could come back

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and dig into your contemporary work a little bit more

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but this is all about people

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who maybe just finding their way now

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into accessibility professionally.

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To find the journeys of others

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so maybe talk a little bit about

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your life experience with that.

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And we'll kind of move up to

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how you're working in that space now.

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- Sure, I guess I can say

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I started seriously looking at accessibility.

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I kinda fell into it by accident.

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I was kind of not sure

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what I was gonna do with myself

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and I, don't know where

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the original tip came from

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but I was invited to do some testing

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with a company called Mobility

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which is a very big accessibility vendor.

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It was kind of piecemeal sort of similar

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to the sort of work I've done with Blink.

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I just kind of started doing that one

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like back in 2015 or so.

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And then it kinda just spiraled from there.

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I've been slowly doing more accessibility work

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and educating myself.

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I took a couple certifications

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and have gotten a little more knowledgeable specifically

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around the web accessibility area.

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But, it's kinda been organic.

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There's not really been any plan per se.

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I just did it because

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as a totally blind person accessibility

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is very important to me

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because without accessible content

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nothing else is usable really so.

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- Well yeah, you're certainly one of the,

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benefits that Blink gets from

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our working relationship

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is you're able to provide that unique perspective

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that you have

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from being blind.

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And it's, you certainly you know that

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you must have informed

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a lot of your thinking

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and experience in this space

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just having to work with assistive technologies

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in your own life

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as you kinda move through school and things.

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So - Yeah.

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- What was that experience like

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and how did that kinda prepare you

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for the work that you're doing today?

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- Well, I mean I've always been a geek

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kinda of a tech geek in general.

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I love learning about technology

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and I guess technology is one more area

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that is kind of interesting to me

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because there's a lot of obviously great steps forward

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in the past few years.

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I think that, like the Apple iPhone for example

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is one of those things

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that on the face of it

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if you didn't know anything about it

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you wouldn't assume it's not accessible

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to the totally blind at all.

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Because it's a touch screen

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and because it,

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but Apple figured out a way

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to make it talk

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and to turn it in the past decade

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into one of the most popular devices

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blind people ever seen.

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So, the thing which interests me I guess

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about this field is that (indistinct)

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while in some ways it's kind of static

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is moving always moving forward

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and there's always something new coming up

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or new potential.

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And I remember back when I was

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in middle school, high school

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I had a device called a Braille `n Speak

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which was basically a portable note taker

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which ran some custom operating system

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they wrote themselves.

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But it in some ways was more advanced

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than the stuff this type of people had at the time.

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Because it could turn on

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that thing could turn on in seconds

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and be ready to take notes.

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And, that I have a soft spot for that thing

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even though I touched one of those in years.

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- Well, you mentioned being a geek

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with respect to tech

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and one of the things that you do

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is you work with a lot of different devices.

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So I know just on the projects we've worked on

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you have your different tools

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that you work with.

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Maybe you could kinda run through

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some of the assistive devices and technologies

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that you work with

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well for your personal life

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and then also lead your work life.

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- Sure, I have obviously a laptop here.

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I prefer, I have Mac Book Air here in front of me.

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I use pretty much every day.

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I like it,

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I like Apple generally.

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Just because it's been,

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it's nice and they seem

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to have a very strong commitment to accessibility.

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Not without misstep

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but most companies seem

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to have had those.

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I have a refreshable braille display

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which is basically a 40 character long braille line

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that you can read

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and that will change

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as the computer

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or whatever talks to it.

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It's expensive as heck

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but I've been told that

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they're working on

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and have come up with ways

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to reduce the price of those things.

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But they are much more, I guess common

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for people who are deaf blind

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but I get a lot out of it anyway

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because I like braille

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and braille is one of those things

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that I have come to appreciate more

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as I've gotten older.

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As a kid I didn't really

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get the point of it, I admit.

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- And - And you also, oh go ahead.

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- Oh, you go on.

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- And you work with your iPhone a lot.

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- I do, I do.

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I have that

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and iOS like I said earlier

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is pretty much one of the best things to happen

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to blind people in many years

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because Apple took a lot of their

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took a lot of pain

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to make accessibility pretty simple on iOS

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and make not only their own apps

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but third party apps playable.

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No it's not playable, excuse me accessible.

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Playable was a no.

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I do a lot gaming on the phone

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so that's where that came from accessible.

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- Well so, we've been working together

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on some projects over the past couple of years

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and when I connect with you about things

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it seems like you're always really busy.

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You always have a lot

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of things going on including work projects.

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You've obviously curved out

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a good niche for yourself work-wise

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but I know generally that

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it can be difficult

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to have busy work lives

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for people who are blind because of limitations

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with just technologies in the workplace.

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So, how has it worked out for you

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where you seem to be really busy all the time?

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- Well my current job is literally

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well suited to me because

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it is about accessibility testing.

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So, it's something that I can talk about

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and that's something that I write a book report about.

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I haven't had any major issues

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with technology on my own

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with these tech assist technology for a while.

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I do tend to,

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I mean I like to solve problems

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or if I can't solve them

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at least understand why things are the way they are.

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So if I run into a problem

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I'm likely to try

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and figure out what's going on.

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I'm a QA person

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I'm a quality assurance person.

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So I try to run through

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steps and figure out

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okay, it's not working

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if not what's going on

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and what can I do to fix it then, yeah.

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- Well I mean

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that's one of the things

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that I've enjoyed about

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our working relationship

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is just your approach to the work.

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I obviously there's uniquely

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what you're able to contribute

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with your knowledge about working

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with assistive devices.

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But beyond that

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you're able to put a lot of thoughtful

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well just a lot of thinking time into

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what you're reviewing

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what the opportunities are

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and what the challenges are.

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And then pulling that all together

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for reports and documents related to that.

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I mean that's really

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a special skill of itself.

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So kinda how did you develop that?

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Where you're able to,

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you have good business communication

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as part of your activities?

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- I didn't I wasn't taught it.

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I just kind of

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it came out of

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it grew out of

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I think I did all lot of beta testing for things.

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And a couple a few years ago

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I did some testing work

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for an iOS game

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which took up a lot of my mental energy,

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but it also taught me how to write a good bug report

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and how to explain issues

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in a way that was comprehensible to somebody else.

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And then the work that I'm doing now

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just kind of amplified that

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because we have a format we have to follow

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and it's all very structured.

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So the structure of

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the reports and issues that I work on

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helped structure my thought process, I suppose.

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And also I mean

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I just have a tendency

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to like the details of things.

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So, I go into a lot of mental depth about things

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that I'm passionate about

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and that accessibility just happens to be one of those.

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- Well you've also

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you've done quite a bit of work

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in showing off your experience

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through your credentials

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through the IAAP.

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So in terms of the certifications

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you've been able to work through the CPAC

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which is the certified practitioner in accessibility

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and also the web accessibility specialist certifications.

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So, those are pretty rigorous tasks

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that you have to take

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to be able to get that.

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So what was that experience like in terms

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of preparing for those tasks

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and taking them and that type of thing?

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- I enjoyed that.

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I liked I have stronger

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or more powerful memories of the CPWA.

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I think than of the other one because

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I felt like I got a lot more knowledge

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when preparing for the CPWA.

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'Cause you had to learn

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not only like

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the very basics of HTML, JavaScript

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and all the rest of it.

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But you had to learn how

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they interact with the screen reader

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or other technologies

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and what happens.

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Things like how little things like

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how you manage focus in a web app, for example.

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Things that you don't think about

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unless you're an accessibility person

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and are paid to think about them.

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And I really enjoyed learning not just

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how things work

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but why they work the way did then, yeah.

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- You mentioned in there that you had a,

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you have a good memory

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and one of the projects we were working on together

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was NASA for

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their new comprehensive website design rollout

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that they're working on.

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One of the areas we're looking at was navigation

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and I mean it's always amazing to me

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when you talk through your mental model

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that you're building

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just from what you're able

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to experience with the,

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through the screen reader

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and keyboard only access.

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And you're certainly skilled in that area

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but I mean it, navigation is

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just must be hugely challenging for yourself.

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And obviously your memory helps in that area

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but how do you approach that part of navigation

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with respect to your work?

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It seems like maybe not everybody

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has that ability to build

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the mental model that you do.

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- Well just, I mean take it one step at a time

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and don't try and think.

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I can't think too hard about the big picture.

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I don't think about the mental model

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I just kind of take it one or two steps at a time

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and try to think

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okay, how does it fit into the grander scheme

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of whatever I'm looking at?

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And, it's sometimes very tricky

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if the site, some of the NASA sites

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in particular the ones

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that displayed graphical information

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were kind of strange

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and a little hard to come grips with.

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But I've had that same experience

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across other places.

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But, a lot of times

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it's a matter of it slowly

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and not worrying too much

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about getting the same information

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as quickly as other people

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as long as I'm able to process it

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then come to an understanding

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of what I'm seeing

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or hearing as the case maybe.

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And depending on obviously web offers

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or others to get their coding right

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which is not always something

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that is guaranteed.

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- Yeah well another thing

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that clearly comes out that

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when we will work together on things is that

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it's easier to see where

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if a process working through

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a digital product or service

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can be made more efficient and simpler

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that helps everybody

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but it certainly speeds up your time

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with not having to hit dead ends

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and things like that

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as you mentioned with code issues and so on.

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- Yeah, if there's a weakness

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I think I tend to,

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like I said, I want to solve problems.

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And sometimes it's a little weird being

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in this situation where I'm not supposed to do that.

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I'm not supposed to speculate

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as to why things are the way they are.

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I really want to know

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and to be able to talk to developers

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and ask them, "Okay, what were you doing here?"

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What was it supposed to do

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because it didn't work in the way it's supposed?"

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Whereas if I'm a tester

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my job is to just go in and say,

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"Okay, this is experience."

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And they're not supposed to reach beyond

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what I'm actually encountering

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to speculate as to the why's and (indistinct)

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But yeah - Well you have

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speculation definitely works out

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in the types of projects that I work on

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because we like to start with foundational research

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that then drives the design

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that then drives the specification

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for the developers.

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So, now maybe thinking

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a little bit looking toward the future

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are there any certain areas

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that you're interested in getting involved in?

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Areas you wanna have more experience

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anything that you're looking forward to

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in your career?

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- Yeah, I'd like to do more tests

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more kind of liaison work I guess with developers,

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like as in, less route testing going through a process

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and more consultancy in the sense of

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okay, this is how we

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this is an issue.

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these are different ways we could solve it.

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Let's fix something

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and brainstorm and figure out what the issues are

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or what a good solution is.

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And if I'm,

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in terms of like bigger picture accessibility things

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that I think are worth,

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that I think are interesting.

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I'd like to do work in game accessibility.

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Gaming is a big passion of mine and accessibility.

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I think there's a lot of room

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for the intersection of those two interests

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but until fairly recently game accessibility

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was just kind of not really considered seriously by anybody.

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And to a certain extent

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I don't think it is still

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at least not for blind people.

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For sighted people

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and for people with other disabilities, yeah.

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But, totally blind people

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they've gotten a proverbial short end of the stick

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in that regard for quite a while

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I think and stuff.

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- There's certainly no shortage

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of things for us to be working on in

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as accessibility practitioners

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and we all wanna be striving

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to have a better future.

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But as you look at

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kind of the things

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that you experience

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in your work today

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are there certain areas

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where maybe you wish that

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more websites or applications

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were doing better?

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I mean what are some of your own

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kind of hot button items that

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you wish would be in better shape

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than they are today?

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- Well, it depends.

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I think that a lot of times

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like the very basics

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of accessible design

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aren't taught as well

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as they should be.

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Like, even something as simple as good alt text

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it's hard to write

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and is knowledge written

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or is sometimes just ignored completely.

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And something like

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even teaching people to use,

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to go through and run a keyboard test.

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Keyboard only tests on their content

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before they release it

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is a big thing that I think could be done

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or should be encouraged more

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because it's not something that I,

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for one thing I don't always enjoy it because

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as a screen reader user

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I don't have a way of knowing

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if something is missed or

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if I'm not seeing so something

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because it isn't there.

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Or if I'm not seeing something

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because the screen reader

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just doesn't recognize it's there.

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Now I can go into like the DOM model

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and inspect things

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and be like,

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oh this thing just wasn't showing up

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because it was marked as hidden or whatever

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but it shouldn't have to do that.

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The designer should know

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the basics of how to present information

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or so that kinda thing.

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Designers and developers both of them.

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- Well, Zack it's good

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to talk with you again

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for the purpose of this podcast.

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And I wanna thank you

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for sharing your experiences

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and look forward to working with you

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on more projects in the future.

About the Podcast

Show artwork for Digital Accessibility
Digital Accessibility
The People Behind the Progress

About your host

Profile picture for Joe Welinske

Joe Welinske

Serving as Accessibility Director at Blink is Joe's main activity. Blink is devoted to helping ensure that digital products and services can be used by everyone. As Director, Joe is responsible for helping Blink's practitioners to build accessibility into everything they do. He also evangelizes the need for accessibility with Blink's clients and partners.
Joe is a co-organizer of the Seattle Inclusive Design and Accessibility meetup group and he serves as the Secretary of the King County Metro Paratransit Advisory Committee.