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    zersiax@cupoftea.socialZ
    @alexhall I mean ... In the bucket of chatter name, chat message contents, chat time and reactions I probably would've put it at the end as well, maybe before the timestamp but that's about it. Where else would it go where it isn't annoying? Maybe a hotkey to query it so you can actually see who reacted what would be better, but then you need to make sure people know the hotkey ... bit of a tricky thing that one
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    from the lovely, visionary, @joslee Community proposal: celebrating, reflecting, and envisioning NVDA's past, present, and future together as a community throughout 2026Joseph Lee12/23/25 Hello add-ons community,Merry Christmas and Happy New Year for folks celebrating them.Please circulate the following community proposal throughout the NVDA community (if you want, please do translate them into your languages). While I will be offline from the community for majority of the time in 2026, I will do my best to offer advice in terms of event planning:Proposal: community events to celebrate, reflect, and envision NVDA’s past, present, and future throughout 2026 (NVDA’s twentieth anniversary):Hello NVDA community,Hope all of you are doing well and staying safe and healthy.In a few days we will usher into year 2026. The upcoming year is special for the NVDA community: it is NVDA’s twentieth anniversary, and the NVDA community should come together to mark this occasion by celebrating, reflecting, and envisioning NVDA’s past, present, and future.Background: in April 2006, an early version of NonVisual Desktop Access was released to the world. In the midst of competition between several commercial (and free) screen readers for Microsoft Windows, NVDA made a mark by being an open-source, free screen reader made by the blind for the blind. For the next twenty years, NVDA and NV Access, the nonprofit in charge of developing NVDA, became a recognized force in the access technology landscape, with numerous awards, sponsorships, and a community of people driving its growth and adoption, including being adopted as a primary screen reader for an upcoming braille-centric computing hardware.In 2016, I and several NVDA community members organized NVDACon, a weekend of fun and reflection on NVDA’s ten years of service and impact. Starting out as a small screen reader targeting Windows XP in 2006, NVDA became a centerpiece of a community dedicated to equal access to technology ten years later. Not only the screen reader itself became an example of community involvement, things around it such as add-ons, localization, tutorials, and others strengthened NVDA’s ecosystem and its message that people should not have to pay extra to access information anywhere. The 2016 event was global in scale and featured talks from members across countries, languages, and backgrounds, including a keynote from NV Access discussing their reflection and vision for NVDA for years to come.So, as we approach the twentieth anniversary of NVDA, let us work together as a community to organize events throughout the year celebrating, reflecting, and envisioning NVDA’s past, present, and future. The events can include workshops on submitting bug reports and feature suggestions, a showcase of community add-ons and their development, a collection of video testimonials from community members, in-person or online gathering of community members organized by local communities or on a more global scale, or something creative and memorable. Ideally, the events should happen throughout the year, with some of the memorable ones happening to coincide with NVDA’s twentieth anniversary in April 2026. Or, if we want, let us try resurrecting international NVDACon and make it more modern such as webinars over Zoom and other more modern (and accessible) possibilities.While many events might be organized at the level of local communities by country or language, I think we should aim to have at least one global scale event in 2026 to celebrate NVDA’s impact in the past, reflect on NVDA’s present strengths and challenges, and collectively envision what NVDA will be for the next five years or so. While I may not be able to coordinate various events including the global event I envision happening later in 2026, I will be available should any NVDA community seek advice on event planning and organization.Thank you.Sincerely,JosephJoseph S. Lee, M.A.PhD student and instructor of record (communication), University of Colorado BoulderCertified NVDA Expert, 2025Member, NVDA Advisory GroupFounder and initial event planner, NVDA Users and Developers Conference (NVDACon), 2014 to 2016#nvda #screenReader #nvda20 #blind
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    For those who wants to give NVDA a second look, NVDA Coach add-on may be very usefulIntroduction to NVDA CoachI'd like to share a free NVDA add-on that I think would help power Jaws users like me to get more familiar with NvDA. It is just recently released by a chap named tony gebhard and its called NVDA Coach, an interactive, in-screen-reader training tool designed to help new users learn NVDA through hands-on guided lessons, without ever leaving the screen reader environment.I would say it's liken to the built-in voiceover tutorial that we are familiar in the iOS system.The recent access on podcast episode #66; NVDA in the Past, Present, and Future has invited a lot of curiosity from new users and even seasoned jaws users that want to give NVDA another look.Anyone that's starting out from that route may want to try this add-on alongside not so beginner friendly user guide and the reasonably priced Basic Training ebook by NVAccess.As a side note, an NVDA-like add-on store is much needed in the jaws ecosystem. That would be the first place new people would want to go to find cool stuff.What is NVDA Coach?NVDA Coach walks students through real NVDA commands step by step, with immediate feedback as they practice each gesture. No need to switch between a tutorial document and NVDA — the coaching happens right inside NVDA itself.What's Included ? 34 Lessons Across Five Chapters, among them are Getting Started (navigation, reading, speech control, and more)Browse Mode (virtual cursor, links, headings, the Elements List, and a live practice page)How to activate it? Press NVDA + Shift + C to open the lesson picker at any time.The latest version as of now is NVDA Coach v1.1.0.What's New in here, among others,Lesson ContentAll steps are now labeled [NVDA command] or [Universal shortcut] so you know which is whichAll lessons include "why" framing (sighted equivalent context)New chapter: Object Navigation — 6 lessonsNew chapter: Customizing NVDA — 2 lessons (keyboard layout, speech settings)Browse Mode lesson 9: Find Text on a Page (NVDA+Ctrl+F)Browse Mode lesson 10: Toggle Single-Letter Navigation (NVDA+Shift+Space)Hotkey NoteNVDA+Shift+C can be remapped via NVDA menu > Preferences > Input Gestures > NVDA CoachMany people are trying this add-on and the interest is brewing. Thanks to Joseph, Gene, and Darrell Hilliker for the feedback that shaped this release.Download the add-onSource code & documentationAccording to the Author, It will soon be available in the official NvDA add-on store, last I check its already submited for review.This add-on was built with AT instructors, orientation and mobility specialists, and self-directed learners in mind. Feedback, bug reports, and suggestions are always welcome [[https://github.com/tonygeb23/nvdaCoach-/](via GitHub).#NVDA #ScreenReader #accessibility #jaws #a11y
  • News from #Microsoft:

    Uncategorized microsoft news nvda screenreader accessibility
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    nvaccess@fosstodon.orgN
    @Rperez030 While using browse mode in Word will overcome most of the same things like pressing down arrow in a multi-column document in Word, this setting is a Word setting, so it will work in focus mode as well as with no screen reader running. Microsoft left the option off by default to preserve the existing functionality - but I can't think of any good reason for NVDA users NOT to enable it (if anyone can think of a reason not to use it, please let me know).
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    dhamlinmusic@dragonscave.spaceD
    @MostlyBlindGamer @zersiax @talon I always liked Navigator
  • Vorlesen

    Uncategorized barrierefreihei tts gtts vorlesen screenreader
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    gnulinux@social.anoxinon.deG
    VorlesenEine kurze Anleitung, wie man sich beliebige Texte in hoher Qualität vorlesen lassen kann. Markieren, Tastenkürzel drücken, los geht es. #Barrierefreiheit #TTS #gTTS #Vorlesen #Screenreader #Orca #Linuxhttps://gnulinux.ch/vorlesen
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    nvaccess@fosstodon.orgN
    @stevenscott I did do a "Choose your own adventure" In-Process once. This one was more.... WRITE your own adventure!
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    @menelion @kaveinthran Some good points here. I love apps, Google Docs, Microsoft Word, VS Code, but there are smaller ones that give you a command pallet or a way to search for commands. I have some smaller projects and a couple of them could use a right click or simple command list. It was even a big deal back when when the Braille 'n Speak let you press 4-cord to look through available commands instead of having to memorize all of them.
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    @x0 @fastfinge I actually made such a thing, for both Mac and Windows, though sadly I lost the Windows version in a computer failure, but perhaps you can take some design concepts from it. It worked on having you make as many subfolders that you could switch to with the right and left arrow keys. Each folder would contain audio files, named after the key that would trigger it. So the way it worked is you pressed a key to enter the soundboard layer, selected a folder with the arrow keys if it you weren't in the right one already, then pressed the key for the sound you wanted. I had plans to add an option to preview the sounds on another device if you added shift to the pressed key and perhaps a mic playthrough to make virtual cable management on Windows easier but I stopped working on this when I got an audio interface with its own soundboard. The sourcecode for the mac version as a hammerspoon module still exists here https://github.com/pitermach/hammerboard
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    rarebird15@allovertheplace.caR
    Question to other #NVDA #ScreenReader users: What clipboard manager do you use? I've been using Ditto, but the labeling in the keyboard shortcuts settings is horrible and making it really hard to set them. When I used it on my last PC, I had JAWS, which reads the field names better, but I've chosen not to install that on this PC.#Blind #Accessibility #Windows #Windows11 #ClipboardManager @main @mastoblind
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    kkarhan@infosec.spaceK
    Wer #ClownFlare - #Malware so stümperhaft einsetzt gehört ausm Internet verbannt!Deeplinking blockieren ist ein absoluter Arschloch-Move!#Javascript-Malware von #CloudFlare ist ableistisch und blockiert #Screenreader und #TUI / #CLI-BrowserDie Instruktionen sind bei Firmen-IT effektiv nen Aufruf zur Begehung von Sabotage (Lest eure "IT-Richtlinien durch!)Kann mal wer bei @antidiskriminierung und @BNetzA solchen Seiten mal nen #Denkzettel geben? Oder gern auch @Bundesverband denn #Malvertising und #Cryptojacking sind reale Probleme und der Grund warum es IMHO unzumutbar ist solchesn shice zu verlangen!Gerade weil Lösungen wie #Anubis clever genug sind entsprechende Software zu erkennen und anders als CloudFlare nicht Code Dritter nachlädt welcher nicht #SelfHosted ist, was das #Sicherheitsrisiko ist! Von #CloudAct mal agesehen... #ITsec #DEpol #EUpol #Datenschutz #InfoSec #ITsicherheit #IT #Sicherheit #Ableismus #Bullshit #Sabotage
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    marco@caneandable.socialM
    @jcsteh @jscholes I agree. And I am grateful that you usually fix the Mac bugs I file fairly quickly, too. Firefox is by far the most stable browser on Mac nowadays, what accessibility is concerned. Apple have had some huge problems in Safari on the Mac lately, not so bad on iPhone, but Firefox has been mostly very stable. And I only use an un-googled version of Chromium if I absolutely have to, because their accessibility bugs are just hideously annoying. Same goes for Electron apps.
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    mrkslrnz@digitalcourage.socialM
    @phranck@meerschweinchen83 Ist das vielleicht etwas für dich? Unterstützung dabei, eine Website mit Verzeichnis für alternative Shops für Screenreader zu optimieren? Die Website ist ein ehrenamtliches Projekt.