Accessibility and Digital Inclusion



Accessibility and Digital Inclusion – CNIB Educate to AdvocateJanuary 2020 Slide 1Introductory Slide with Microsoft Logo followed by the word Microsoft in Standard Letters, ASL hand signs, and printed braille dots. Slide 2Accessibility and Digital InclusionRicardo Wagner, Accessibility Lead Microsoft CanadaSlide 3Why this Matters to MicrosoftA solvable design challenge that drives innovation“Stairs make the building inaccessible, not the wheelchair.”Disability is a complex phenomenon, reflecting the interaction between features of a person’s body and features of the society in which he or she lives.Two images - one of a someone pushing a person in a wheelchair up a ramp over a steep set of stairs with the word "afterthought" at the bottom. The second photo is of a ramp that is built into the design of the stairs and says "by design" at the bottom Slide 4DISABILITY is not the same as PERSONAL HEALTH CONDITIONDISABILITY equals MISMATCHED HUMAN INTERACTIONSSlide 5Disability in the Modern World1Billion Estimated number of People with Disabilities worldwide 2x Unemployment rate for People with Disabilities as compared to People without Disabilities6 Areas of Disability70% of Disability is InvisibleAny of us can be affectedDisability = TalentAt the bottom of the slide there is an infographic than from left to right says Permanent (one arm), Temporary (arm injury) and Situational (new parent), with accompanying illustrations of these three different categories. Slide 6Why Microsoft inclusive design?Empower every person and every organization on the planet to achieve more.There are 7.4 billion people in the world. Each unique.Our ambition is to create products that are physically, cognitively, and emotionally appropriate for each of them. It starts with seeing human diversity as a resource for better designs.Culturally, the method is aligned to multiple attributes including a growth mindset.Slide 73 principles of inclusive designRecognize ExclusionExclusion happens when we solve problems using our own biasesLearn from DiversityHuman beings are the real experts in adapting to diversitySolve for one, Extend to manyBy focusing on what's universally important to all humansSlide 8Expanded infographic of Types of Disabilities, showing illustrated examples of Permanent, Temporary and Situational for Touch, Hear, Speak and See. Slide 9Exclusion ExamplesSlide includes three images, one of children playing on a piece of playground equipment, an image of a crash dummy sitting in a car, and an image of someone scanning a card against a device mounted on a wall. Slide 10Xbox Adaptive ControllerImage of two male gaming fans are watching a game. One of the men is using the Xbox Adaptive ControllerQuote "It was an amazing experience to hand me back the controller I never thought I’d ever hold again. The whole gaming industry needs to take a lesson and understand that a large minority of gamers have a disability."-Vivek Gohil, GamerSlide 11Editor was inspired by the plain language initiativeImage of the Microsoft spellcheck menu searching for the correct spelling of "principle". Slide 12Search was inspired by people who are blindImage of the Microsoft search bar at the top of the screen, where someone has typed in "insert picture"Slide 13 Learning Tools were inspired by people with learning disabilitiesImage of presentation, the word "lakes" is highlighted in the centre of the screenSlide 14Image of Satya Nadella, CEO of Microsoft above the quote “We will focus on designing and building products that our customers love and that are accessible to everyone and built for each of us.” - Satya Nadella, CEO, MicrosoftImage of a person in a wheelchair above text box stating "Employees are our experts"Image of white text on a black background with some words highlighted in red, above a text box stating "Hackathons" Slide 15Our ValuesInclusive…in how we hire and design our productsTransparent…in how we communicate with our customers and partnersAccountable…to what we commit to deliveringHumble…in our approach“Nothing about us without us”Partnering with internal and external stakeholders to create products that work for everyone.Slide 16Microsoft Accessibility FeaturesVisionNarrator/Braille?Beta??Magnifier?Color Filters??High Contrast?SeeingAIHearingClosed Captions?Stream?Translator?Mono Audio??Visual NotificationsPhysicalEye Control?Sticky, filter, and?toggle keys??On Screen?Keyboard?Dictation?PowerPoint?Designer?CognitionLearning Tools,?Read Aloud, and?Reading Mode?Quiet Hours?Turn Off?Notifications?Editor?Inking?ResearcherInclusive Design FeaturesWindows Hello?Tell Me?Word Prediction?Text Suggestions**coming in next build?Images of people using various types of technology are above each of these categories ?Support articles for all features can be found at: aka.ms/microsoftaccessibilityfeatures?Slide 17Braille in Narrator Beta Windows 10 narrator supports braille displays from over 25?manufactures???A braille keyboard can be used for entering commands or entering text in contracted or uncontracted?braille??In the Fall Creators update, we also added the highly requested ability?to perform keyboard shortcuts like?Ctrl+S?or?Alt+Tab?via commands on?a braille keyboardLink to braille support in narrator user guide?Slide 18Magnifier Image of a display menu for the magnifier toolImage of the Microsoft Accessibility webpage, with the words "committed to accessibility" highlighted Slide 19Seeing AIImage of someone using their phone camera and holding their phone up in front of them towards the person sat opposite themSlide 20High ContrastImage of the same Microsoft word document twice, one is a black screen with white text, one is a white screen with black text. Slide 21Closed CaptionsImage of Microsoft PowerPointSlide 22StreamImage of Microsoft StreamSlide 23Microsoft TranslatorImage of Microsoft TranslatorSlide 24Windows 10 Eyes GazeImage of a digital keyboard Slide 25On Screen KeyboardImage of a digital keyboard overlaying a Microsoft Word document Slide 26Dictation Image of a Microsoft Word document using dictationSlide 27PowerPoint DesignerImage of a person in a wheelchair with a laptop on their lap, and on the right hand side that image is placed on different design layout examples Slide 28Learning Tools, Read Aloud, and Reading ModeImage of Learning ToolsSlide 29Turn off notificationsImage of the notifications menuSlide 30EditorImage of a Microsoft Word documentSlide 31InkingImage of a Microsoft Word documentSlide 32A collage of upbeat images of people using technology in all parts of life, phones, large screens, tablets, laptops etc. Underneath the collage is the text "All day. Across Devices. For a lifetime." Slide 33An image of two women in a professional setting, one is walking alongside the other who is in a wheelchair. TD Bank"By using Office 365 and?Windows 10, we’re making it?simple for our employees to?create inclusive content for each?other and for our customers,?opening a new world of?opportunity.?" - Julie?Branscombe??, Senior Inclusion and Diversity Lead, ???TD Bank Group?Slide 34Let's ConnectPicture of Ricardo Wagner's LinkedIn profile @rimatswagnerSlide 35Closing slide with Microsoft Logo followed by the word Microsoft in Standard Letters, ASL hand signs, and printed braille dots. [end of presentation] ................
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