Friday, November 22, 2024

MEET THE WHEELCHAIR USER MAKING GOOGLE MAPS MORE ACCESSIBLE

SASHA BLAIR-GOLDENSOHN


Sasha Blair-Goldensohn
points to spoken walking-directions, originally developed for blind/low vision users.

In a big city — with noise, cyclists, traffic, trains, distractions — it’s safer and more efficient for everyone to listen to directional instructions instead of staring into their phones when crossing busy streets.

The feature wasn’t developed for wheelchair users either, but it’s a whole lot easier to keep pushing when a friendly computer voice is telling you where to go instead of having to stop and swipe at your phone every few blocks.

For Blair-Goldensohn, whose work revolves around universal design, it’s hard to understand why you would do things any other way.

To him, working toward a world that can be accessed by everyone, benefits everyone. “Solidarity is powerful,” he says.

 

 

 

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