Students from Drexel University, St. Joseph’s University, Swarthmore College, West Chester University and LaSalle University participated in a web accessibility hackathon this past weekend for people with disabilities.
“I don’t think a hackathon of this sort has been done before,” said EvoXLabs founder Ather Sharif, who we profiled last month.
The evoHaX hackathon, which began Friday evening and concluded Sunday afternoon, was organized by EvoXLabs as part of Philly Tech Week.
The teams gathered at Benjamin’s Desk on Friday to listen to five speakers discuss accessibility concerns for the blind, deaf and those with aphasia. EvoXLabs then brought in three subject-matter experts for each condition to help teams better understand web accessibility concerns.
Many of those concerns seem to surround a lack of text, stemming from content creators’ reliance on visual and audio content. Whereas the internet used to be extremely textual, it would seem those days are over.
“We’ve gone from perfectly accessible to perfectly inaccessible,” said Neil McDevitt, executive director of the Deaf-Hearing Communication Centre. McDevitt said one of the largest concerns for the deaf is the quality of YouTube captions. While the site has a built-in component that generates captions, McDevitt said they aren’t nearly accurate enough.
And emerging technologies have provided a bevy of accessibility challenges for the visually impaired. For example, how are blind people supposed to build a website through Squarespace? “The whole click and drag thing is inaccessible,” said Walei Sabry, housing coordinator at New York’s Mayor’s Office for People with Disabilities.
Like McDevitt, Sabry said content creators need to develop strong options for people with disabilities. “I’d like to see maps translated into text data.”
EvoXLabs’ Sharif hopes evoHaX will be a crucial first step in raising awareness about web accessibility.
“I’m not sure why this hasn’t happened before,” he said. “Hopefully, people will keep picking up on it.”
Here are the projects that came out of the hackathon (with a major hat-tip to evoHaX speaker and front-end developer LeeAnn Kinney).
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Drexel University (1st Place)
All female Drexel team presenting speech-reader Bluetooth module. Ladies represent 🙌🏻 #womenintech #PTW15 #evohax pic.twitter.com/EbTzUM1EUo
— LeeAnn Kinney (@_leekinney) April 19, 2015
Swarthmore College
Team Swarthmore's data on YouTube videos w/ captions by category. News highest and sports lowest #evoHaX #a11y pic.twitter.com/2ryiylLHPq
— LeeAnn Kinney (@_leekinney) April 19, 2015
West Chester University
WCU CS students presenting with their subject expert, Wally http://t.co/OVdwWfA0H7 #a11y #PTW15 #evohax pic.twitter.com/DHln7XJ1Ht
— LeeAnn Kinney (@_leekinney) April 19, 2015
St. Joseph’s University
Team SJU demoing an extension to add familiar icons to help users with dyslexia read sites easier #evoHaX #a11y pic.twitter.com/WovcxfgP0p
— LeeAnn Kinney (@_leekinney) April 19, 2015
LaSalle University
LaSalle student demo of iDescribe, crowdsourcing for alt tags #evoHaX #a11y pic.twitter.com/nzjn8eJZO2
— LeeAnn Kinney (@_leekinney) April 19, 2015
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