Project Admins

  • Avatar Image
  • Avatar Image

Library Tech

Public Project active 6 months, 1 week ago To join this project, Log In or Sign Up!

About:

Project:
Library Tech

Events:
Saturday Nov 5th, 1pm to 3pm — Accessible App Demo
Saturday Nov 5th, 3pm to 5pm — Problem Identification Workshop
Monday Nov 7th, 6pm to 9pm — Accessibility Hackathon Preparation Session
Saturday Nov 12th, 10am to 5:30pm — Accessibility Hackathon

The DC Public Library Adaptive Services Division sponsors an Accessibility Hackathon project during DCWEEK. The events will include an Accessible App Demo, a Problem Identification Workshop, a Hackathon Preparation Session, and the Hackathon itself, all held in room 215, Adaptive Services or the LibraryLab space at the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library.

The Hackathon will be an opportunity to build tools that meet the needs of the user community.

Details on the individual events follow:

Saturday Nov 5th, 1pm to 5pm, Room 215, Adaptive Services, MLK Library
Accessible App Demo and Problem Identification Workshop
Presentors: Mark Reumann – Patent Office, Zuhair Mahmoud – Library of Congress, Don Barrett – Dept of Education

From 1pm to 3pm, these presenters will demo and discuss Accessible Apps, like MoneyReader, Color Identifier and VisWiz, to a community of users who use screenreaders to access their mobile devices.

From 3pm to 5pm developers and project managers are invited to participate in a Problem Identification Workshop, to get requirements and problems out of this user community. This will be an opportunity to put heads together to come up with tools can be built at a Hackathon that will be held the next Saturday.

Monday, November 7, 2011 – 6:00pm to 9:00pm, Room 215, Adaptive Services, MLK Library
Accessibility Hackathon Preparation Session
Speaker: Gerardo Capiel, Bookshare

Gerardo Capiel from Bookshare will talk from his experience with similar events, on how to choose projects, what lessons they have learned, and how to set up the development environment on a laptop for a hackathon.
He will speak about some related technologies like the Bookshare API ( http://developer.bookshare.org ) and the new Google Chrome TTS APIs: http://googlecode.blogspot.com/2011/10/new-text-to-speech-api-for-chrome.html?showComment=1319148125417#c3671817693482193507

Saturday, November 12, 2011 – 10:00am to 5:30pm, LibraryLab space, 1st Floor, MLK Library
Accessibility Hackathon
with support from Bookshare, Random Hacks of Kindness, LibraryLab and others

This Hackathon will be an opportunity for developers to get together and build tools that meet the needs of the user community. With the preparation of the Problem Identification Workshop on Saturday Nov 5th, the Hackathon Preparation Session on November 8th, and the help of organizations like Bookshare, Random Hacks of Kindness, LibraryLab, and the Wikimedia Foundation, we hope to be able to come up with a simple and completable ICT solution to one or more needs that are defined by the user community.

Contact us:
202-727-2142
patrick.timony(at)dc.gov

  • Patrick posted an update in the project Library Tech:   6 months, 1 week ago · View

  • Patrick posted an update in the project Library Tech:   6 months, 1 week ago · View

    Linked here: bit.ly/rytFiK , and listed below are products that have been proposed to be built colaboratively at the Accessibility Hackathon at DC Public Library on Saturday, Nov 12, 2011, 10am to 5:30pm, in the Library Lab space and Room 215. Please send any comments or aditional ideas to patrick.timony@dc.gov . Register at: http://accessibilityhackathon.eventbrite.com/
    1. Light weight version of Bookshare for BrailleNote users using the Bookshare API (http://developer.bookshare.org)
    2. TTS Twitter client either using Chrome TTS APIs (http://code.google.com/chrome/extensions/tts.html). See example code at http://github.com/gcapiel/ChromeWebAppBookshareReader
    3. Searchable Repository of 508 Technology Guides (see previous email from Jamal). Jamal would contribute zip of content. Could be done in Drupal or Wordpress.
    4. Mobile Accesible Book Generator – Scan a book with your phone, type in, speech recognize or OCR the text, keep the images and output an RTF, DAISY 3 text (http://daisy.org), or EPUB version, which can be submitted to Bookshare and other repositories of accessible ebooks for people with print disabilities. Particularly useful for children’s books which have few pages and words.
    5. Mobile App that detects when the person in line in front of you has moved. One idea is to check when the iPhone camera comes out of focus.
    6. Mobile color identifier that speaks a smaller set of colors (8 or 16?).
    7. Accessible version of Tor
    8. Accessible fork of privacy tools at http://guardianproject.info using Android’s Accessibility APIs
    9. Alphabetic keyboard for beginning level VoiceOver users. The QWERTY keyboard arrangement is a barrier for some users.
    10. Facetime Audio description network.
    11. Face-Name or Voice-Name recognition Quiz for social networks – a system that would train the user to associate either images of a face or recordings of a voice with the name of the person they belong to
    12. VoiceOver Math Equations, Audio Description for Video Programming, instead of audio track, have metadata – pause the screen and get an audio description, searchable
    13. App for movie description via iPhone, a collection of inaccessible material made accessible using a mobile accessible format conversion station
    14. Something that makes Twitter easier to read – automattically read a stream of information to you, using live regions ARIA Web App, a New Tweet comes in announces it automatically
    15. Are there any apps that desperately need to be made accessible?
    16. non visual mind mapping app — structure information present non-visual trees, branching tree nodes, windows explorer – folders, nested folders, tree control http://www.informationtamers.com/WikIT/index.php?title=Mind_mapping_for_people_who_are_blind
    17. An application that integrates with TheMashupApp, a powerful personal database that could work together with #4, #10, #18 and possibly others.
    18. an application that makes audio description non-linear, with text to speech, from educational point of view, tagged, with layers of information
    19. QR codes could be used to put in an app or provide info to the iPhone, add contacts to your iphone, a QR code on movie ticket, push description to iPhone, embeded in clothing, various object, specialized information, walking directions, signs specialized info pushed to iphone, tactile identification so you know where it is.
    20. Any of various tasks that would help out the Adaptive Technology Program like making an accessible interface for Ustream where all the STTS audio and video is stored, captioning those videos, dragon-recognize Victor-Streamed interviews from the beginning of Accessibility Camp
    21. an accessible conferencing solution
    22. create accessibility templates, wizards
    23. an iphone app for Metro Access that shows the location of all vehicles

  • Patrick posted an update in the project Library Tech:   6 months, 2 weeks ago · View

  • Patrick posted an update in the project Library Tech:   6 months, 3 weeks ago · View

    ATTENTION — DATE CHANGE

    The Accessibility Hackathon Preparation Session featuring Gerardo Capiel from Bookshare has been switched to MONDAY NIGHT, 6pm to 9pm, at the same location.

    Accessibility Hackathon Preparation Session — Monday, Nov 7th, 6pm to 9pm

  • Patrick joined the project Library Tech   6 months, 4 weeks ago · View