The archetypal screen reader user is a fully blind person, although other users (such as people with low vision, partial vision, dyslexia, etc) can also benefit from them. Screen readers are one kind of digital assistive technology that people with disabilities can use to interact with devices and services. I also recently wrote an article about how Accessibility on Wunderpedia came to be. A lot of links in this article go to our Wunderpedia, which Wunder launched this past May on Global Accessibility Awareness Day. And then there’s the matter that’s more relevant to my work: I couldn’t find a simple source that discussed multilanguage bugs in screen readers, which is ridiculous considering that every single screen-reading software has quite a few of these (not to mention that screen reader users are as capable of speaking multiple languages as anyone else). Firstly, it’s already hard enough to find tutorials and instructions about how to set up screen readers so they even work in multilingual situations. I performed these experiments and wrote this article because, as far as I know, this type of knowledge wasn’t recorded anywhere. And, of course, my many years of research experience allow me to design experiments, collect data, and crunch numbers, not only when it comes to studying plants, but also this article’s topic: screen readers.Chemistry lets me see how pieces fit together, whether they are atoms in a molecule or components in an interface.
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