Are you interested in ‘inclusive design’? Do you want your approach to technology to include ‘accessibility’ as a design theme?
Microsoft is a great resource for inclusive design & accessibility and our research is available for download:
- Inclusive: A Microsoft design toolkit
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/Design/inclusive
Microsoft @ CSUN Assistive Technology Conference 2017
We recently also participated in the CSUN Assistive Technology Conference this past March as hosted by the Cal State Northridge Center on Disabilities. Here’s the list of sessions Microsoft presented at the conference:
- Windows Narrator: What’s New in Windows 10
- What’s new in Microsoft Office 365 & How it Helps Advance Digital Inclusion
- Use Skype and Skype for Business for More Inclusive Meetings
- Building a Diverse Workforce: Microsoft’s Inclusive Hiring Program
- Disability Answer Desk: Quality Tech Support for Customers & Enterprises
- Microsoft Edge and Office 365 with JAWS
- Sight Sign: An Example of Open Source Accessibility at Microsoft
- Accessibility in Windows 10: What’s New
- Multi-Device Automated Transcription for Use in the Classroom and Schools
- Accessibility at Microsoft
- New Reading & Writing Tools in Word for People with Learning Differences
- Journey to Make Software Usable for All: Learning from Microsoft Office
- Cities Unlocked: Light Up the World with Sound
- Accessible Authoring Made Easier in Microsoft Office 365
- What’s New in Skype and Skype for Business
- Excel Tips and Tricks
- Why Must Sound Only be Heard: Experiments in Artificial Intelligence
If you’re a customer of mine, and are interested in talking to one of Microsoft’s presenters, let me know and I’ll see what I can do.
If you’re interested in the PowerPoint decks from the conference that were presented by Microsoft, most can be found here:
- CSUN ATC 2017 – Docs.com
https://docs.com/MicrosoftAccessibility/8117/csun-atc-2017