Personally I think alt-text is valuable for everyone, not for just people with visual impairments.
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I like to put funny bonus content in my alt text and I hope others do to so I check
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@Yehuda I have visual impairments, but not blindness specifically. Alt-text is still used by me on occasion for additional context and those times where I'm encountering a slow/spotty connection.
I'd imagine TTS would be handy for those times my eyes are badly fatigued and I can't look at the display.
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@Yehuda Curious if screen readers read poll choices.

@equalitysiren @Yehuda Yeah, I'm now wondering that too.
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ok wow, 613 poll responses in the first 60 mins - Mvto!
@Yehuda 613!!!
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@Yehuda xkcd made alt-text fun
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@Yehuda I assume I don't count as "visually impaired" because my vision is correctable to 20/20. I mostly use alt text if my connection shits the bed or if I need more context for what I'm looking at
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@Yehuda Peripatologists of the world unite!
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@Yehuda I don't often read them, but when I do it's because I can't understand the image by itself & need more context
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@Yehuda why do I depend on alt-text? I disabled media previews for saving data

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@Yehuda it's great to find a really well done alt text but mostly I only read them when I have a question about the image. I like the challenge of writing them, but sometimes I don't do an especially good job of it. When I first came here I liked that they are very much encouraged.
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@Yehuda@turtleisland.social I am visually impaired but not to the point of requiring alt text, yet I still read it for more context frequently.
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@Yehuda I'm not visually impaired but I *always* read alt text. Some of the people I follow write alt text so goddamn good it's like reading Tolkien write about trees.
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@Yehuda I love when alt text includes context about the photo, or the text of a sign/label that might be difficult to read on a small screen, etc.
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@Yehuda I also watch TV with the captions on. Not hearing impared, but I do have delayed input reaction so the captions help me keep up.
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@Yehuda I use captions on video because it's easier to read than listen (and often less annoying to turn off the sound) and transcripts very often (the eyes are faster than the mouth). Alt text description of images never.
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@Yehuda I wear glasses, so technically I'm visually impaired. If you need glasses to read, you too are visually impaired.
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@Yehuda I'm not visually impaired and checked "rarely" but "rarely" includes _occasionally_, which I _absolutely do_.
But as a percentage of images I see, it is indeed rare.
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@Yehuda So much accessibility tech is useful to everyone. I use the buttons to open doors all the time when I'm carrying something cumbersome. I use the wheelchair ramps when I'm pushing something on wheels. I use a screen magnifier to make sure pixels line up when working on a code project. I can look elsewhere than the pedestrian crossing light when waiting because it'll beep when it's my turn.
There's literally no argument against making society accessible.
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@Yehuda I use it as an opportunity to understand things that aren't visually clear.
Famous people are big here. I'm not very "up" on television/etc. and don't always recognize celebrities.