Adaptive Tech Resources
- A Manifesto for Universal Web Design
- Things to Do Before Asking “Is This Accessible?”
- The Complete Guide to Captioned Video
- Accessibility Webring Club
- Visual Dictionary of Wheelchair Types
- Deciding to Use a Wheelchair When Walking is Possible
- Funding a decent wheelchair, US edition
- Nuts & Bolts of Getting Your First Wheelchair in the USA
- Reinventing the wheel: form, function, and your first wheelchair
- Locate a Swimming Pool Worldwide
Disability Culture
- Disability Justice Resources
- Composing Access: An invitation to creating accessible events
- USA-based Disability Orgs Doing Good Stuff
- Disability History Museum
- Dave Hingsburger's Brilliant Disability Culture: Of Battered Aspect
- Blogging Against Disablism Day at Diary of a Goldfish
- FWD: Feminists with Disabilities Moving Forward
Indeed.
Date: 2021-07-17 09:11 pm (UTC)I've witnessed the confusion sighted people have when interacting with people who don't do any eye contact (blind or autistic or different cultural norms). Robinson shows that alternating eye contact is similarly confusing. (Half a loaf?)
Because all this electronic medical record nonsense should be useful, I checked my chart re: my eyes
...thank heavens for https://eyewiki.org/ to explain what all those mean.
My weaker eye drifts out- and upward, though not as markedly as James Robinson's. You?