Remember, life is what you make it,

Carolyn

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Victoria 
To: Portia Mason ; Debbie Ghee Logan 
Sent: Wednesday, July 15, 2015 1:02 AM
Subject: Facebook Accessibility for Users with Visual Impairments 


 

 

 

Facebook Accessibility for Users with Visual Impairments: What Facebook Wants 
You to Know, by Bill Holton 

 

 

Reprinted with permission from "AccessWorld," vol. 16 no. 4, April 2015.

  

 Facebook is an excellent way to keep in touch with friends and family. For 
users of computer and mobile access technologies, however, at times, there can 
be challenges. The company continuously evolves its products, which can 
introduce changes to screen-reader flow. So, in order to help readers more 
fully enjoy their Facebook experience, we are excited to offer the following 
information.

  

 Thanks to consumer feedback, and working with several organizations, including 
the American Foundation for the Blind (AFB), Facebook has taken accessibility 
to a whole new level. In July of 2011, the company formed the Facebook 
Accessibility Team to improve its support of accessibility across products. 
Recently, AccessWorld spoke with team founder Jeff Wieland and accessibility 
engineer Ramya Sethuraman, who offered us a top-10 list of things they'd like 
readers to know about Facebook's accessibility program and products.

 

Facebook Offers Extensive Keyboard Navigation

 

For computer users who do not use a mouse, including most screen-reader users, 
the main Facebook web site makes extensive use of headings, landmarks, and 
lists, which can be easily navigated with your screen-reader navigation keys. 
Additionally, the main Facebook web site also offers an extensive roster of 
Access and Shortcut keys to help you navigate the site and quickly perform 
actions, such as liking, searching, and sharing.

 

Access Keys

 

"Access keys let you jump quickly from page to page [within Facebook] with a 
single key combination and without having to tab down to or search for the 
appropriate control," says Wieland.

 

Key combinations vary by browser and/or system:

. Chrome for PC users combine the ALT key with the access keys listed below.

. IE users combine the ALT key with the access keys listed below, completing 
each command by pressing the Enter key.

. Firefox for PC users press Shift + ALT in combination with the access keys 
listed below.

. Mac users press Control + Option in combination with the command keys below.

 

Facebook Access Keys  

. Home: 1

. Timeline: 2

. Friends: 3

. Inbox: 4

. Notifications: 5

. Settings: 6

. Activity Log: 7

. About: 8

. Terms: 9

. Help: 0

 

Shortcut Keys

 

Much the same way as most screen readers offer single-key navigation shortcuts 
to help you quickly find your way around a web page, Facebook offers a number 
of single-key commands to perform various actions. Many of these shortcut keys 
conflict with browser keys, however, so for now, at least, you will have to 
either use your screen reader pass-through command, or turn off enhanced 
browser navigation (Forms Mode in JAWS, Focus Mode in NVDA, and Browser Mode in 
Window-Eyes).

  

 "If you happen to be in an edit box, or on some other pop-up control, you may 
have to tab away or close the dialogue before using the shortcuts," says 
Wieland.

 

Facebook News Feed Shortcuts  

. Scroll forward through News Feed stories: j

. Scroll backward through News Feed stories: k

. See more of the selected story: Enter/Return

. Post a new status: p

. Like or unlike the selected story: l

. Comment on the selected story: c

. Share the selected story: s

. Open an attachment from the selected story: o

. Search: /

. Search chat contacts: q

. Open a list of these keyboard shortcuts while in News Feed: ?

 

Facebook Messenger Shortcuts   

. Search conversations: CTRL + g

. Show/hide keyboard shortcuts: CTRL + q

. Archive/unarchive conversation: CTRL + Delete

. Mark as spam: CTRL + j

. Start a new message: CTRL + m

. Go to Inbox: CTRL + i

. Go to Other: CTRL + u

 

Facebook Is Making Photos and Videos More Accessible

 

"We're still rolling out the Dynamic Alt Text Generator to more products that 
will improve the accessibility of both photos and videos," says Wieland. "We 
gather all the metadata a user supplies and combine it to generate a caption 
that tells a more complete story about that." This Facebook Design video shows 
voicing for photos and videos before and after Dynamic Alt Text captioning: 
https://www.facebook.com/accessibility/posts/441575089212506 (link is external).

 

Check out the Mobile Apps for Facebook

 

Facebook offers a mobile site, but Wieland encourages iOS and Android 
screen-reader users to try the native apps for these operating systems. "We've 
put a lot of work into improving the accessibility of the Facebook and Facebook 
Messenger native apps, and in some cases we can build accessibility experiences 
in these applications we simply can't easily replicate on the web (like use of 
gestures)," he says.

  

 When you have finished reading a timeline entry using the iOS app, for 
example, you can now perform a two-finger double-tap to summon a VoiceOver 
menu, which includes options to like the post, comment, turn on notifications, 
or indicate "I don't want to see this" (which will hide the story). The 
two-finger scrub gesture also now works to close any pop-up or dialogue screen. 
The Facebook Messenger iOS app also now includes an action item on the rotor. 
Perform a one-finger swipe up to delete a message thread, mute a conversation, 
archive a conversation and more.

 

It's Easy to Contact Facebook

 

"Facebook offers several ways to get in touch with the Accessibility Team, and 
we love getting your feedback," states Wieland. Users can like the Facebook 
Access for People with Disabilities page 
(https://www.facebook.com/accessibility (link is external)) to stay up to date 
on accessibility work and improvements, visit the Facebook Accessibility Help 
Center (https://www.facebook.com/help/contact/169372943117927 (link is 
external)), and follow the Facebook Accessibility Team (@fbaccess) on Twitter. 
The Accessibility Help Center offers an accessibility bug report contact form 
where you can report accessibility issues.

 

Spreading the Accessibility Message to Other Facebook Employees

 

In October of 2014, the Accessibility Team launched an installation at Facebook 
Menlo Park, Calif. headquarters called the Empathy Lab. The lab is designed to 
showcase the different and various methods that people use to interact with 
Facebook and broaden the company's understanding of how to build products that 
are both usable to those with limited bandwidth and accessible to screen-reader 
users.

  

 "We're hoping to give Facebook employees an idea of what it's like to use 
Facebook with magnification or a screen reader. We do this with a collection of 
laptops and mobile devices which can only be used with a keyboard or using 
screen readers or on slow network connections," says Ramya Sethuraman. "The 
installation has become so popular, we're looking to expand it to other 
campuses so more members of the Facebook team can experience it."

 

The Facebook Team Is Constantly Improving the Accessible Facebook Experience

 

Below Wieland outlines just a few of Facebook's recent accessibility 
enhancements.

. You now have the ability to control font size in the iOS Messenger app.

. New VoiceOver gestures were added to help people more easily access the 
Delete, Mute, and More actions within iOS Messenger.

. New access keys were added to the mobile site.

. A "Skip to News Feed" link was added to Facebook for people using just the 
keyboard and screen readers to easily jump to the News Feed stories.

. We now support multilingual caption files for Facebook Videos so you can 
provide subtitles for all of your video content.

 

Facebook Will Keep You Updated

 

Every month the team posts a comprehensive review of the key accessibility 
changes and enhancements. You can find the February 2015 update at 
https://www.facebook.com/notes/facebook-accessibility/february-2015-mont... 
(link is external). The 2014 year in review is available at 
https://www.facebook.com/notes/facebook-accessibility/2014-year-in-revie... 
(link is external).

  

 "Follow our Facebook page so you don't miss any future updates," Wieland 
suggests. The URL is https://www.facebook.com/accessibility (link is external).

 

Facebook Wants Your Help

 

Facebook has a dedicated User Experience Research team that runs many different 
kinds of studies, including in-house usability studies and phone interviews 
with people who use their products.

  

 "Our last round of accessibility usability testing focused on TalkBack with 
Facebook for Android," relates Wieland.

  

 If you would like to be considered for participation in future studies and 
getting paid for your feedback, send an e-mail to the accessibility research 
team, [email protected] (link sends e-mail).

 

Accessibility Beyond Facebook

 

"The Facebook Accessibility Team is passionate about making accessibility more 
mainstream, and one of our top priorities is to introduce accessibility to new 
audiences," says Sethuraman. "For instance, last year we spoke at Stanford 
University to introduce students to writing accessible code. We also gave a 
talk on web accessibility basics at the Grace Hopper Conference."

  

 In addition, the Facebook Accessibility team actively consults and 
collaborates with various disability organizations. Notes Wieland, "Last year 
we sponsored and spoke at the American Foundation for the Blind's Leadership 
Conference. We also sponsored the American Council of the Blind's summer 
conference in Las Vegas. We recently joined the American Association of People 
with Disabilities Tech Forum and are excited about collaborating with industry 
leaders on a range of accessibility related initiatives."

  

 For Global Accessibility Awareness Day (GAAD), Facebook hosted companies from 
the Bay Area for a round of lightning talks on accessibility implementations. 
Guests included the co-founders of GAAD, Jennison Asuncion and Joe Devon.

 

Facebook Is Hiring!

 

"We recently grew our dedicated accessibility engineering team, and we are 
still hiring," says Wieland. "We are actively looking for an accessibility 
specialist." You can read more about the position on Facebook's careers page.

 

 

< Crossroads 2015: The Highway to Success, by Carla RuschivalupMiles to Go 
Before We Rest, by Larry Johnson >.

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