I have been looking with interest at the following publication.

Proposal For New Accessibility Emoji

by Apple Inc.

www.unicode.org/L2/L2018/18080-accessibility-emoji.pdf

I am supportive of the proposal. Indeed please have more such emoji as well.

In relation to the two dogs.

My own (limited) experience of guide dogs for people with a vision disability, 
just from seeing them in the street and on television is that in the United 
Kingdom the dogs often have a yellow protective coat with silvery strips on 
them so that they can be more easily seen. It may also help them being more 
readily recognised as each being a guide dog. The dogs tend to be of a type of 
dog of rather wider aspect ratio, if that is the way to put it, than the dog in 
the sample glyph in the proposal document. The dogs tend to be a creamy yellow 
colour, though there was a famous guide dog who was all black, famous as the 
guide dog was allowed to accompany a then Member of Parliament into the House 
of Commons Chamber in London.

So, while the two rod guide handle, contrasted with a floppy lead, is a good 
disambiguation guide for the two types of assistance dogs, I suggest that using 
the presence of what the proposal terms a vest for disambiguation may not be 
appropriate.

Also the word vest appears to have different meanings in British English and 
American English.

Maybe jacket might be better choice of word than vest for the standards 
document.

What about the colour and type of the dog? Perhaps easier to add in now than 
later?

What about a person with a hidden disability? Many people have a hidden 
disability yet do not have a service dog as the nature of the particular hidden 
disability or maybe hidden disabilities does not need the help of a service dog.

Should there be an emoji for a person with a hidden disability? Or maybe more 
than one such emoji so as to disambiguate the types of hidden disability, 
always remembering to have an "other hidden disability" emoji so as to include 
all types of hidden disability?

Those questions, and indeed the whole proposal document, lead to asking for 
what purposes these emoji are envisioned as becoming used?

For example, a person with a hidden disability might not like to be referred to 
as such, yet may like to describe himself or herself as having a hidden 
disability if trying to find appropriate facilities relevant to the particular 
disability, such as a toilet for a person with a disability with the additional 
facilities thereof, or seeking access to a chair or a first-aid room, or 
seeking help for opening a door, or maybe when requesting a special diet, such 
as a gluten-free diet.

How could the accessibility emoji in the proposal be used in practice?

William Overington

Monday 26 March 2018

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