With Google working on this accessibility, it definitely looks like it might outpace and outsource the Apple iPhone and what Apple is able to do. I would like to see the accessibility options that Google is doing all in a smart glasses! That way we don’t have to hold our phone up or anything in our hands. Basically our our hands would be hands-free. Thanks for another awesome video! You rock! Love you.
Hey Steven! Always great to hear from you. I'm not so sure about Apple being outstripped by Google. Let's wait until WWDC and see what Apple has up its sleeve. Maybe it will astound us!
nah man, Google is still years behind Apple when it comes to accessibility it's not even close. and i'm prety sure Apple intelegence will bring this and many more helpful features just cuz you can always count on Apple never designs anything without thinking of all possible customers.
@@carrieonaccessibility I have been working on Braille and accessibility code projects for a while. I was editing Linux's Orca screen reader; to write out the braille and text to a file. That whole thing is mis-designed in ways I can't get into here; but the time is ripe for a better screen reader. Before that, I was making things like iPhone case mechanical keyboards with braille as the layout. And I got started into this by making 3D printed 8-dot braille templates. (The one you get from APH doesn't take the actual size of a stylus into account; and it wasn't hard to make better ones. I only have cheap plastic prints, but could do a run on better printers. I can also vary the parameters for anything from full-page templates, to pocket templates. Can do 6 or 8 dot and try out various dot spacings too.) Now, I have been writing OpenAI chatbots. I really think screen readers are going to end up getting a complete makeover. We will have remote screen readers (ie: control a computer in the cloud over ssh), and LLM screen readers; and they will be usable by sighted people and bots.
@@carrieonaccessibility you’re welcome sorry that I missed my text. I must’ve didn’t speak clear enough, but anything is helpful and you’re welcome a whole lot!
Yes it can help you get closer the real information when you ask a lot of specific questions. You can eventually ask questions like logic puzzles so can rule out very misleading things in directions or stories of events, that jump around in the person's mind amid other distractions. It becomes easier to determine when Hallucinations are happening or just plain making up something to say. Why I still prefer old style search engines, if they operated the way they did, early on. Boolean had been great but is just unresponsive for years now. It doesn't sift or crawl like it did a little over ten years ago. I found way trickier to find things than ever responds to even easy stuff now or the last eight years.
@@carrieonaccessibility 1. Assume nothing. 2. How you do anything is how you do everything. 3. Master your surroundings. 4. Never make it personal. 5. If you don't know what to do, do nothing. 6. Question orders. 7. One mission at a time. 8. Never kill a kid. 9. Always play offense. 10. Never let an innocent die
Hotels and motels, often want a car license plate number, besides just a driver's license or ID. I almost forgot about this until just now. This would be highly unfair for lots of travelers, disabled or not.
With Google working on this accessibility, it definitely looks like it might outpace and outsource the Apple iPhone and what Apple is able to do. I would like to see the accessibility options that Google is doing all in a smart glasses! That way we don’t have to hold our phone up or anything in our hands. Basically our our hands would be hands-free. Thanks for another awesome video! You rock! Love you.
Hey Steven! Always great to hear from you. I'm not so sure about Apple being outstripped by Google. Let's wait until WWDC and see what Apple has up its sleeve. Maybe it will astound us!
nah man, Google is still years behind Apple when it comes to accessibility it's not even close. and i'm prety sure Apple intelegence will bring this and many more helpful features just cuz you can always count on Apple never designs anything without thinking of all possible customers.
I am also most excited for project Astro. Omg! Those were some great bloopers lmao! I love it! 💚
Yes. I like AI interviews. LOL. And project Astra needs to come right now. Right right now!
@@carrieonaccessibility lol you're so impatient
Guilty as charged@@ToughBeifong
What a great find! I am glad to see people that need accessibility, thinking about how to get sighted people to use the same tools.
Thank you! :) Honestly, accessibility has the potential to be beneficial for everyone.
@@carrieonaccessibility I have been working on Braille and accessibility code projects for a while. I was editing Linux's Orca screen reader; to write out the braille and text to a file. That whole thing is mis-designed in ways I can't get into here; but the time is ripe for a better screen reader.
Before that, I was making things like iPhone case mechanical keyboards with braille as the layout. And I got started into this by making 3D printed 8-dot braille templates. (The one you get from APH doesn't take the actual size of a stylus into account; and it wasn't hard to make better ones. I only have cheap plastic prints, but could do a run on better printers. I can also vary the parameters for anything from full-page templates, to pocket templates. Can do 6 or 8 dot and try out various dot spacings too.)
Now, I have been writing OpenAI chatbots. I really think screen readers are going to end up getting a complete makeover. We will have remote screen readers (ie: control a computer in the cloud over ssh), and LLM screen readers; and they will be usable by sighted people and bots.
Wow!!!! So Amazing Gang!!!!!!! So Amazing You Are Too Carey!!!!!! 😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅❤❤
Thanks Philip! You are too. :D
Well it is great that google annoucing these features of gemini and it's a great tool to use compared to windows copilot
We shall see what copilot does. haha. The AI revolution is just beginning after all....
Ram ram carry im from India my name is akshay and im your new subscriber❤❤❤
Hi there. Nice to meet ya. :)
Ted does awesome 17:24
Yep! Pretty awesome stuff. Thanks Larry!
@@carrieonaccessibility you’re welcome sorry that I missed my text. I must’ve didn’t speak clear enough, but anything is helpful and you’re welcome a whole lot!
Yes it can help you get closer the real information when you ask a lot of specific questions. You can eventually ask questions like logic puzzles so can rule out very misleading things in directions or stories of events, that jump around in the person's mind amid other distractions. It becomes easier to determine when Hallucinations are happening or just plain making up something to say. Why I still prefer old style search engines, if they operated the way they did, early on. Boolean had been great but is just unresponsive for years now. It doesn't sift or crawl like it did a little over ten years ago. I found way trickier to find things than ever responds to even easy stuff now or the last eight years.
Yeah.. there are good things and bad things about AI.
This is cool
sure is! and so is pink!
@@carrieonaccessibility 1. Assume nothing.
2. How you do anything is how you do everything.
3. Master your surroundings.
4. Never make it personal.
5. If you don't know what to do, do nothing.
6. Question orders.
7. One mission at a time.
8. Never kill a kid.
9. Always play offense.
10. Never let an innocent die
Lot of reasons I still am not all that with AI.
Hotels and motels, often want a car license plate number, besides just a driver's license or ID. I almost forgot about this until
just now. This would be highly unfair for lots of travelers, disabled or not.
TalkBack needs better Braille display and emoji support. If that improved, I'd make the switch from Apple immediately.
I know that they're working on braille display support. Not so sure about the emoji though. :)
😊
:)