@sc Documents for Readdle (free but various features require subscription). Transmit by Panic if you ever snagged it in the past (it's no longer for sale. FTPManager for one that's free-with-no-in-app-payments free.
@ripp_ Real bat question, that one
@TobySocks @PsyChuan Camp Howl, unfortunately, do not ship to the UK at the moment, due to Brexit bureaucracy.
Source: Really wanted to buy a thing from there recently.
@ripp_ Nice job, past Ripp_
Everyone always goes right to God is a DJ or Insomnia when it comes to best Faithless tracks but I really prefer Mass Destruction or Bring My Family Back myself. #JustFaithlessThoughts
On that note, if any y'all fuzzies been involved in any interesting projects, or can scan/photograph old con books or whatever, that can all be useful information to put on WikiFur :>
Over the festive period I've found myself trawling through http://Archive.org snapshots and social media feeds trying to drag up as much info about old/obsolete/forgotten furry fandom topics as possible so I can document them somewhere.
WikiFur could use some good quality contributions and TLC as of late; and archival of history is pretty important, especially niche fandom history that probably won't get recorded anywhere else.
accessibility, please boost
@EmilyIsRad Ahoy, randomer who saw this get boosted and happens to do this kinda thing for a living—at least with regard to websites.
JAWS is the most commonly used screen reader by some margin, but it’s unfortunately not free. NVDA (which is free!) is second, with macOS/iOS VoiceOver and Windows Narrator on roughly level pegging behind.
I wouldn’t worry too much about which one you test with, personally, as the main differences between them are in how they’re used and the specifics of how they parse particular things: VoiceOver might not explicitly state that some text is in bold where the others will, for example. You might see more deviation between them depending on the complexity of the document, as there are a few HTML/ARIA features and attributes with inconsistent support.
And to answer the actual question, I test with VoiceOver on Mac and NVDA on Windows.