Technology

Top Four Web Accessibility Excuses Deaf People Get

Top Four Web Accessibility Excuses Deaf People Get

Not only are there accessibility laws for deaf people in the physical world, such as the right to request CART and interpreters and other reasonable accommodations, deaf people have the right to digital accessibility.

You would think digital accessibility would be easy for companies to accommodate, right?

True, but many don’t. Instead, they make excuses so they don’t have to change what they’re doing.

How Deaf People Helped Change Texting Over The Years

How Deaf People Helped Change Texting Over The Years

Before the Internet came along, deaf people relied on TTYs and snail mail. They’d even drive long distances to their deaf friend’s houses and wave at the window to get their attention! If they’re not home, they’d write a note and leave it at the door before driving back home.

Once the Internet came along, deaf people began using email to communicate with each other. They still used TTYs to make phone calls, however. In the 1990s, it was “cool” to only check your email once a day, or even better, once or twice a week. But once we passed the year 2000, if you only checked your email once a day, you’d quickly get left behind on the latest news, upcoming events, and even gossip.

Why Most Deaf People Don’t Wear Hearing Aids

Why Most Deaf People Don’t Wear Hearing Aids

Did you know that only about 2% of people with hearing loss regularly wear hearing aids?

Beyond Tone would like to extend the perspective that being deaf is perfectly normal.

So why do we not like wearing hearing aids sometimes?

Is it the stigma?

Deaf People Left Behind

Deaf People Left Behind

How the Deaf Community Can Get the Same Opportunities as the Mainstream Population Afforded by Technological Advances and Innovation

In 2017, the mainstream audience has an abundance of technological options when it comes to user experience. Deaf people’s options are more limited, especially when the technology leans heavily towards audio-only input and output.

A few examples of audio-based technology include iPhone’s Siri, podcasts and new streaming video platforms that lack closed captioning.