Ask Lemmy
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Many blind people don't, because for blind people a text-based interface makes a LOT more sense than a graphical user interface. And the text-based browsers don't precisely excel on JavaScript.
(But, who cares about some blind people anyway?)
Most Lemmy frontends don't work without JavaScript.
I may be wrong, but I'm pretty sure most blind people just use regular browsers with a screen reader like JAWS or NVDA.
Most do, many don't.
Most blind people are not told by anybody that you can use a computer in text form, because most sighted people don't know you can. The user experience is on a whole another level when you have an interface that is basically tailored to you, instead of using something made for people with wildly different abilities than yours! At least, when I watch my friend browse the web in those two formats, the difference is daunting.
It's not okay to block them from using an otherwise much better option. Even if not everyone knows about the better way.
I didn't know that. I had assumed people using screen readers would use the same versions of websites as everyone else.
Off to do some research, to make my own sites more accessible for the blind!