[nfbcs] Inaccessible training, again

John G. Heim jheim at math.wisc.edu
Fri Feb 15 15:45:53 UTC 2013


Right, I'll admit it may be hopeless. Personally, I am unwilling to give 
up without a fight. And there is some reason for optimism. Companies 
like VMWare and Cisco need to sell their products to universities and 
those universities are subject to 508 regulations. I was part of an 
effort about 10 years ago to get Oracle to make their web interface more 
accessible. The people who licensed Oracle products for the University 
of Wisconsin asked me to give them information on the accessibility 
problems I had. They took them to Oracle and some of the problems got 
fixed.  So to some small degree, technology providers are interested in 
accessibility especially if they are made aware of the problems by 
institutions subject to 508 regulations. It's not much but it's something.

I talked to the chief  technology officer of VMWare a while ago. His 
name is Steve herrod. He happened to be in Madison for a seminar and I 
went up and introduced myself after the talk. He was very receptive to 
the problems with VMWare. I am not a VMWare technician so I had only a 
vague understanding of the problems. I think we could have gotten 
something done if I could have gotten help from some blind VMWare users. 
  This was particularly frustrating to me because I know some blind 
VMWare technologists and they are constantly complaining about it's 
accessibility problems. Yet my pleas for help with this effort went 
unanswered.

What I would like to do is put together a list of steps a company can 
take to make it more likely their products are accessible. For example, 
recruiting blind beta testers and designating someone in the company as 
the accessibility guru. Stuff like that. I figure if we go to these 
vendors, explain the problem, tell them we have suggestions and make it 
as easy as possible for them, we have a chance.


On 2/15/2013 9:16 AM, Gary Wunder wrote:
> Hello, John.  I did not know about this organization.  I think one of the
> questions that it will have to face after it surmounts the organizational
> problems you are talking about is what real power and leverage it will have
> to exert.  What we found with Amazon was that they were perfectly willing to
> sit down and talk with us, impressed us with their engineers, were impressed
> by our technical expertise, but never really implemented the things we
> talked about.  It seemed to us that they either ignored what we had to say
> or through their accessibility engineers under the bus when it came time to
> make a market decision about goal or no go when accessibility was broken.
> We have seen Microsoft make this decision plenty of times in their release
> all mobile phone operating systems.  They keep talking, we keep talking,
> they keep promising, but the releases go out the door.
>
> Warmly,
>
> Gary
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: nfbcs [mailto:nfbcs-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of John G. Heim
> Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2013 11:01 AM
> To: NFB in Computer Science Mailing List
> Cc: Gary Wunder
> Subject: Re: [nfbcs] Inaccessible training, again
>
> I hope you guys all know there's a non-profit devoted to helping high tech
> workers with accessibility. It is the International Association of Visually
> Impaired Technologists. See www.iavit.org. We've had trouble getting
> anything accomplished because it seems people like to complain but seldom
> want to actually do anything.
>
> The one thing that I'd really like to see get off the ground is the
> committee to contact manufacturers of products high tech professionals use
> to raise their awareness of accessibility and possibly help them make their
> products accessible. I'm talking about things like routers, virtualization
> software, and on-line courses. The NFB does a good job of working with
> companies like Microsoft on making sure things like email and spreadsheets
> are accessible. But nobody talks to Cisco or VMWare.
> That's what IAVIT is for.
>
> Well, that is what it is supposed to be for. So far it's just a dream.
> Some would call it a fantasy.
>
>
>
>
> On 2/14/2013 9:41 AM, Gary Wunder wrote:
>> Hello, Steve.  In a large company what you face is frustrating; in a
>> smaller company it may well be overwhelming inasmuch as the small
>> company believes that it has no leverage to exert over providers.  I
>> think this has to be a major topic at our computer science meeting
>> this year.  I know the struggle; it wasn't so long ago that I was
>> arguing with the training department about whether it would make the
>> effort to use accessible software or would pay someone to sit with me,
>> do the reading, and press the buttons.  I did not feel comfortable
>> with the latter solution, but it was the most immediate one at hand,
>> and I think it does comply with the Americans With Disabilities Act.
>> Of course the problem is that you can only do so much of this without
>> being regarded as a burden by the people with whom you work and the people
> who supervise you.
>>
>> Warmly,
>>
>> Gary
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: nfbcs [mailto:nfbcs-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Steve
>> Jacobson
>> Sent: Tuesday, February 12, 2013 11:09 AM
>> To: NFB in Computer Science Mailing List
>> Subject: Re: [nfbcs] Inaccessible training, again
>>
>> Tracy,
>>
>> Do you know what the software that is being used is called?  I am
>> dealing with a similar problem here and getting nowhere.  I have had a
>> couple of cases where the reason for the course was for me to just
>> press a button to acknowledge I had read some documents that I had
>> read, and the button was not at all accessible.  When I complained,
>> reasonable accommodation was seen to be having a co-worker press the
>> button for me.  That worked in the short run, but what about the long
>> run?  I have had no luck getting the name of a contact outside of my
>> employer which is what I really need to see what can be done.
>> However, in my case, a good deal of the problem is with FLASH.  In one
>> course, the problem was that all buttons that were used in the entire
>> course remained visible to Window-Eyes, JFW and NVDA.  The TAB key
>> even jumped to them.  However most would do nothing when pressed
>> because they were not part of the current window.  There could easily
>> have been 100 unlabeled buttons of which maybe five were active, and
>> the others did not show visually.  I have another set of courses where
>> I figured out that the button that goes to the next frame which has a
> label of "next" is identified as "Close" by screen readers.  This isn't a
> problem once I figured it out.
>> Some of my courses display PDF documents within the course but
>> apparently provide their own inaccessible PDF viewer.  Sometimes I can
>> get these documents separately once I find the person who wrote the
>> course, but it all takes time away from my job.  In short, I'm with
>> you completely but don't really know where to turn.  Adobe will tell
>> us that FLASH can be made accessible and they have all kinds of
> information as to how to do it.
>> Developers will tell you that Adobe puts all of the burden on them.
>> Okay, so I'm venting, too.
>> <smile>  In my case, most courses have been accessible for me where I
>> work until the past couple of years, so I'm seeing the accessibility
>> slipping away.  The problem is that nobody realized that what they had
>> done was accessible because one doesn't complain about something when
>> it works.  In the old days, when there were instructors for classes, I
>> could often get by with taking careful notes and perhaps reading just
>> a little from the material.  I might just study a couple of diagrams with
> the Optacon.
>> However, we not only don't have instructors any longer, we are
>> required to take many more courses, some for legal documentation
>> purposes.  Some courses are such that I would have to get security
>> clearance for a reader, and the workload is so unpredictable, it isn't
>> a great solution, especially when this wouldn't have to be a problem.
>> Running into this kind of thing as well as the problems you and I have
>> mentioned with respect to computer update screens, and even what I see
>> as flakiness with screen readers in certain applications just gives
>> one an uneasy feeling about our progress.  There has to be a way to
>> put some pressure on some of these developers, and if we can get our
>> TEACH act passed, it might help in that some of these developers
>> probably develop some on-line courses for higher education.  However, in a
> large company, this kind of thing is very frustrating.
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Steve Jacobson
>>
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Steve Jacobson
>>
>> On Tue, 12 Feb 2013 11:36:54 -0500, Tracy Carcione wrote:
>>
>>> I was recently assigned some online training at work.  It's always
>>> been inaccessible, but I thought I should give it a try and see if
>>> somehow they had changed things.  Nope, still inaccessible.
>>> It's so frustrating, because it's almost accessible, except that
>>> there are lots of unlabeled buttons, and, when they ask a question
>>> designed to test my knowledge before moving on, it's displayed as a
>>> picture, with no
>> text.
>>> At which point I'm stuck, and have to stop.
>>> I've complained to Human Resources, to Training, and to some VP in
>>> charge of web-based training.  I just left feedback on the site,
>>> trying to explain the problem.  I really don't know what else to do.
>>> If they really want me to take this course, they'll have to assign
>>> someone to sit with me and do it, and the boss doesn't want to do
>>> that.  So I get no
>> training.
>>> I'm not sure what I'd actually learn from the training, but I guess
>>> I'll never know.
>>> And to add insult to injury, right on top of the training website it
>>> says "empowering people".  Well, not blind people.
>>> I'm just venting my frustration, though if anyone has some idea, I'm
>>> open to suggestions.
>>> Tracy
>>
>>
>>
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>>
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