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Welcome to Podcasting Tech, a podcast that equips busy

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entrepreneurs engaged in podcasting with proven and cost effective

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solutions for achieving a professional sound and appearance.

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I'm Matthew Passi, your host and a 15 year veteran in the podcasting

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space. We'll help you cut through the noise and offer guidance on software and

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hardware that can elevate the quality of your show. Tune in weekly

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for insightful interviews with tech creators, behind the scenes studio tours, and

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strategies for podcasting success. Head to podcasting tech dot

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com to subscribe to this show on YouTube or your favorite podcast platform

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and join us on this exciting journey to unlock the full potential of your

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podcast. Gonna talk about something that we

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not a lot of podcasters really address, and it's something that more of us

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should be thinking about, the idea of accessibility with

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our digital content. And joining us to talk about that is

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Maxwell Ivy, known as the Blind blogger.

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He also runs the accessibility advantage. You can find out the accessibilityadvantage.com.

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And for as long as I've known Maxwell, which has been a few years since

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we first met at a Map Con here in South Jersey,

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maybe 5 years ago, He has always been out there trying to

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help podcasters make their content more accessible so

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that everybody can enjoy what it is that you were doing, and

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we are excited to chat with him about that today. Maxwell, thank you for joining

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us. Oh, thank you, Matthew. I'm happy to be here. It's always

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great when I get to spend time with one of my one of my favorite

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leaders of the podcast industry, so thank you. Oh, is that person here?

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I don't see them. Well,

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I I I wanna definitely talk about accessibility. I wanna talk about all the different

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things that podcasters can and should be doing, but, you

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know, the blind blogger is such a unique moniker for

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someone to have. Tell us a little bit how you started with

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that and where you're at these days with your with your digital media,

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adventure. Right. So you know that I started

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life as a car loaner. After my dad's death I

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transitioned to brokering used rides on the Internet,

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as social media came along I was building a community

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there and as a former shorthand, people on LinkedIn and Facebook just

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referred to me as the blind blogger because in 2009,

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'ten, along in there, there weren't a lot of people with

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disabilities period on the Internet and very few of them were putting

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themselves out there as openly as I was. You know, I like to

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tell people I wasn't the the most talented, most

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prolific, or most consistent, but I was the most shameless. So people knew

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me and they hung that name on me and it stuck and when I decided

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to start a second website to talk more about being a blonde entrepreneur, it was

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the natural choice and it stuck with me and, you

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know, the only thing I regret about the blind blogger is,

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in some cases, it's a little limiting, but I think I've finally found the

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right balance with the old and the new. I just tell people, Hey,

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I'm the blind blogger of Maxwell Ivy. Now let's talk about accessibility,

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because the truth, the truth is I've been

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talking about accessibility for years. It's just I'm

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surprised you and everybody else didn't tell me that that was what I was doing

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while I was doing it because up until 4 years ago, I really didn't

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realize just how much of an impact I was having, how big an advocate

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I was for making the Internet and content on the Internet

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more inclusive. And it was only as I started to get work

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thrown at me, basically, in the area of writing on the

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subject of accessibility that I realized, wait a minute. I've been doing this stuff for

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17 years now and I am the expert. And it's

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about time I lean into that role and start to

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be recognized for it more directly and get paid for it, of course.

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We always wanna get paid for our good work. Before we jump

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into the the work of accessibility specifically and and what you've been doing over

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at the Accessibility Advantage, because we do like to talk about technology and

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equipment and tools, I'm wondering what has been some of

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the best innovations, specifically in

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podcasting as far as equipment that allows you to

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have a show and and be successful with your content creation journey?

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Well, I hate to to spoil such a great question, but,

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I am not a high-tech person and even living vicariously

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through my friends with disabilities who are high-tech persons, there

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haven't been a lot of of big time innovations that

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have made having a podcast easier. I do

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have one thing that I'm using right now that I really love, although it's not

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as smart as it advertises itself to be. I have an interlink 360

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video camera, and it uses artificial intelligence

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to stay focused on my face and keep me centered in the camera

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view. Now, it took over an hour with a sighted person

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to configure it where it actually knows what it's supposed to do and when it's

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supposed to do it, but it does work really well now. So I can

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move forward and back and side and it'll still have me in focus. And

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this is important because I don't have complete

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control of my space. And as a blind person, one of the most

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important things to you is consistency. How do you create a

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consistent workspace or a consistent routine? And so

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I can't guarantee the furniture will be in the same place every time,

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but now I have a camera where I don't have to worry about that anymore.

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So that's that's an innovation. I would say

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that some of the new microphones that I haven't gotten to try yet are probably

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using artificial intelligence, and, I would

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also say just more people getting involved and becoming familiar

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with accessibility so that I don't have to

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spend as much time getting them up to speed as to what I need.

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And, you know, speaking of technology, I think you were there at the

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event where I won that, that very nice,

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microphone at Joe's event. I took it home and I used

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it twice, and then it broke, and a

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while after I posted those 2 episodes, people said, you know, Max, we loved your

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interviews, but the audio wasn't synced. The volume

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we'd have to raise the volume to, hear your guest and then

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we'd have to lower it so you didn't blast us out of the room.

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So, sometimes technology can be very challenging if you have a disability,

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but I feel like, Zoom, Google Meet, and the other

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meeting platforms have done a good job of helping

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the the novice and the disabled balance their

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their sound quality so that people can really enjoy the

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audio and concentrate solely on the message. And and,

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certainly, there's a lot of post production tools as well that will fix a lot

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of problems, that might come up with, when you have difficulties in

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recording your your content. So let's let's talk about accessibility in

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the podcasting space. And, you know, I I think

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people are gonna hear this and they're gonna think, well, podcasts are an audio

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medium, you know, what is the big challenge for a blind blogger

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to listen to a podcast? Tell us what

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are the biggest hurdles that you come across when

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either you're trying to find specific content or

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you've landed on a specific show or network or

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program, but, you know, there are other things that

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would be done better to make your your experience

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enjoying it, a little bit smoother. Right.

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So I'm gonna come with this from 2 points. I'm gonna start with

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the positive, what podcast hosts can be doing

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that will help them take advantage of accessibility to build

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a better connection with their audience. One of the

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big trends in podcasting is people recording in

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video and then outputting the audio. The problem

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is, is depending on who you ask, anywhere from 70 to 85

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percent of your audience is only going to listen to your

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podcast. So they don't have the advantage of your video.

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So the one thing that would really help your audience

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is if you would do what is called an audio description. That's

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where you tell them a little bit about what you look like, your background,

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what you're wearing, what your set looks like. If you have a dog or a

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cat that thinks it's part of the show and will make an occasional appearance

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describing them, but more importantly, if there are head shakes,

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if there are facial expressions, if there are things that happen during the

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video recording that you think to yourself, if I had

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seen that happen, it would have affected me emotionally,

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or it would have entertained me, or made me laugh, or something. If I had

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seen that, it would have affected the way I,

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experienced this show, then you want

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to describe those things as they happen as best as you can. Sometimes you'll have

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to describe them afterwards. Sometimes you may wanna put it in the in the post

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production show notes, but these are the kind of things that your

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audience who, by the way, they're just as blind as I am, most of

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them, they can't appreciate what was going

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on on screen while you were recording this audio that you're outputting

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to your player. So I highly encourage people to do an audio description.

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If at the end of this recording you want me to do mine for you

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to give them an example, I could do that. That's one thing I would say

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because it allows you to build a stronger connection with your audience, which leads

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to more loyal listeners, which leads to downloads,

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reviews, and, hopefully, email subscribers are people who will buy

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whatever it is you're selling the next time you have something to sell. So that's

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Let's let's not wait. Let's let's get a sample of an audio description now so

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that while we're thinking about it, people can understand what it is that you're referring

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to. Well, I was hoping you would say that, but you being the host, I

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didn't wanna step over. So

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so I am a 59 year old white Caucasian

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male, and I say that because I'm a pale person. I have medium

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length brown curly hair, brown eyes. I'm

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wearing a white blue button down dress shirt, black tie. I'm sitting in a

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generic office chair, in my bedroom, which also

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doubles as my recording space. I have my back background

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blacked out or blurred out, whatever the big kids' term for it is,

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so there's nothing back there. No dogs, cats,

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children, etcetera. No, no monograms

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or, logos on my clothing, no visible tattoos.

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Those are the kind of things you would want to describe for people in the

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beginning of your introduction. And, of course, for me, since I have a disability,

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at the end, I would mention that I am almost totally blind

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having retinitis pigmentosa, otherwise known as RP.

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Okay. Thank you for sharing all that with us and and

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explaining what a good visual, what a good audio

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description is for a podcast, something that maybe more people can be, thinking

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about in the future. So what was your your second point on this front

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as far as trying to enjoy podcasts, you know, with accessibility

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challenges? Right. So the the most important thing

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is your player and where they're gonna find your player.

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So if you're using one of the top podcasting

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platforms, the odds are their players' buttons are going to be accessible.

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I have not been on any of the majors where that's been the

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case. It probably will be more likely to be the case with

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a with a free hosting provider or

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with somebody who is new to the industry as a hosting

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provider, but you do want to check and see if the

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buttons are properly labeled. It's easier if you have

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access to a screen reader or if you use a product like WAVES

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or the free checker at audioeye.com. Either of those can help you determine

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if your website or your player's website is accessible,

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at least for the most part, probably about 70%, 60%.

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It'll sell you, you know, at least that much of it whether it's right or

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wrong. So your podcast player being able to pause,

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stop, fast forward, rewind, being able to share your

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content by clicking the buttons, or by subscribing to

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whatever their favorite platform is, those things need to be tested.

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And then the website where you locate it. You want to make

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the podcast player on your website. I would

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say it should be the only thing on the page, unless

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you're using a plugin that allows you to embed

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your player on your homepage and then have it display the

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latest episode within that player, which I understand a lot of people do that now

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as well. In that case, you just want to make sure that there are as

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few elements on the home page as possible alongside

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the player. So when people use adaptive

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technology, whether it is somebody who is slightly

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visually impaired that has a screen magnifier,

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or somebody who's more impaired like me that uses a screen reader, or you're talking

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about hearing impaired, or people using automated switch devices

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because they have a lack of limbs or motor control,

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regardless, it takes people like me longer

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to navigate your websites. So

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the simpler design that you have, the fewer elements that

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you use on any one page, the better, because

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the the fewer things I have to pass through in order to find the one

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thing that I came to your website to do, which as a podcaster,

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that one thing should be your podcast. So if

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I have to navigate through 3 different pages

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or if I have to navigate through 25 links before I find

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the link to this week's episode or the player for where I can listen

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to any of your episodes, that's just making things harder for

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me and for people like me. So that's why I was was talking about

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adaptive technology and

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in some cases the adaptive technology

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also can can lead to some some help

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for, people that are are wanting to bring more

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traction to their website. Because after you talk about

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navigating a website and focusing on a simple clean design

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with a minimal number of elements, one of the next things you're gonna

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talk about is image. Because as podcasters, we've all got

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artwork for our shows, we've got artwork for our episodes, we've

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got artwork for our profile on our home page, and all those images

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need to have the alternative text tag that describes the image for

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people using a screen reader, but those descriptions are also

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indexed by Alexa, Google, Siri, all the

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major search engines are indexing those

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and the only problem I have when I tell people about that

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is they want to stuff keywords into their image descriptions.

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So I tell people you have a 150 to a 180

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characters depending on the search engine that will actually be indexed. So let's

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try to split that in half and have half be the name of your company

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and what you do and the other half be what's

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actually in the image, and that way you get the best of both

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worlds. You can drive traffic, and I am sure

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that you probably spent a lot of time, effort, stress, and

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maybe even a fair bit of money into creating the images that are on your

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website. So why not make sure that everybody

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visiting your website can appreciate them? You know,

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you were talking about what our page should look like.

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Is it best practices or would it be

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advisable if somebody has the resources to almost make, like,

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a separate page that would be more accessible

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friendly versus their main podcast listening page? Just because,

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you know, there's there's something about the design and form and function that

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people look for when they want to create a website.

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But also, you know, what is best for the entire audience so

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that everybody can enjoy the content and not get bogged down in, you know,

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tons of details and and, you know, tons of these,

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accessibility features kinda overloading our circuits with all

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the different things that we have on the site. Right. Well,

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I personally don't believe that anyone

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should be creating a second version of your site. I know that

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the larger corporations like, like Audible

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and Amazon, I know that they do it, but I often

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find that the version they've created specifically for people using

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adaptive equipment turned out to be not all that

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great and some of that's because they don't have the right

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people providing information to the developers on their

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team and some of it is just lack of time or

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funds or lack of care. I also don't

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believe that people should have to install a plug in or a

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widget on their website to make it accessible. The truth is, most

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things, other than the alt text descriptions and the audio descriptions for

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videos and audio files, other than those, everything you

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do to improve accessibility is stuff that you should be doing to improve the

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user experience of everybody else that visits your website anyway.

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Okay. That's that is fair. What

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about when it comes to transcripts? How often do you find yourself

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using those? I don't personally use them

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that much unless there's something in the episode that I plan on using

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in a later talk or presentation of some

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kind, but they are targeted to me. Transcripts

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are great for people that have a hearing disability,

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but transcripts and closed captions are one of those things

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that have a large benefit to the able-bodied

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community. Here's a statistic that I recently found

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where people under the age of 35, that

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37% of that group will not

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watch a video on any platform unless that

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video has closed captions. Now, we both know that's

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because they're most likely gonna be watching some of those videos when they

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shouldn't be watching those videos, and they don't want people

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overhearing them. But that's the truth. There's a large part of

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the society that is depending on closed captions because it just

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fits their lifestyle and the same thing applies with audio

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descriptions. I have sighted people who will tell me, you know, Max, if I have

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a good audio description during a movie or a TV show, once they discover that

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they're there on their TVs, if I have a good audio description, I don't have

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to look at the TV. I can go do other stuff. I can follow the

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plot and, in some cases, can even follow the plot

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better because the narrators will tell about stuff on the

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screen that maybe you missed because your focus was not

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totally on the screen for that 1 or 2 seconds where

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you needed to see something in the corner of the screen or whatever. So,

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I would say that those types of things,

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they make life easier for a lot of your people who don't have

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a disability. Another good example is the text,

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size, font, color contrast on your website and on

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your on your website pages.

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If you take a, if you take

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a high contrast color, like say black on white or black on

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yellow, and you give the user the opportunity to invert the

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text so that you have a white text on black background,

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that becomes much more easy to read and to

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navigate in very bright or very dark light for

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people who don't have a vision issue. That is absolutely

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fair. And I do see a lot of folks who are, switching over to dark

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mode often when they're at their computer. And so I could see why that would

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just be something good for people to think about even if they're not necessarily thinking

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about full accessibility, you know, concerns

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and whatnot. So what is it like to work with you? If somebody's hearing this

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and they're thinking, you know, man, Maxwell's got a great point. There's a lot of

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these things that we should be doing, but we just don't know how to. How

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do they work with you? What does engagement look like? Well,

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it starts with reviewing their current

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platform, whether that's a website, an app, or their podcast, and seeing where

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they're at now, giving them a

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breakdown of where they stand on the issues, and

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giving them a prioritized list of what needs to

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be done right now, you know, what are what are things that are

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basic necessities of accessibility that have to happen,

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or what are things that we can work on later. I'm

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definitely a big fan of doing this at

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the the speed that the website

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owners team can handle as far as time and money.

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And sometimes what we have to do is we have to say, okay, these things

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we can't fix now, but what we can do is we can come

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up with workarounds that we can teach to

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users who have a disability, and we can make those available either on the

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website or put a post a note that if

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they if they send us an email or click a button, then we can make

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those available to them so they can navigate the accessibility issues

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in the short term while the owner works on that.

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Then once those are corrected, then we can go

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on to something else that needs to be done. We can also reevaluate things that

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have been improved to make sure that later additions to the

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website haven't compromised the accessibility that we just built.

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I firmly believe that accessibility is a progress and not

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a perfection, and so it's, it is,

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it is one of those things where you're gonna work through it and

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hopefully get to the point where you're in the high 90s

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percent of accessibility. And thanks to my education,

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you understand how adaptive check users will navigate

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the Internet, so you'll be able to maintain it and avoid

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causing problems to it going going forward. One other thing I

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do that most people in this field, I feel

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like they're they're dropping the ball for their clients is

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the disability community, we love to support businesses that are making

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effort to be inclusive, but most business owners, for some

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reason, are reluctant to

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proclaim, announce, share with the world the

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efforts that they're putting in to being inclusive. I don't want I don't

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I don't have any idea what their reasons are, but I just know that they

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just don't feel right talking about the work they've done or the work they've

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had done. So, during the process I'll do

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blog posts, social media posts,

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we'll do podcast episodes for some clients because it isn't just

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about improving the accessibility because, you

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know, part of the point is making it accessible because it'll make it

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easier for everybody else that will visit your website or your or your products or

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services. But a big part of this is improving the

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lives of people with disabilities, and it really doesn't

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improve their lives if they don't know about it. So

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evaluation, advice on correction, reevaluation,

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promotion, that's what it looks like to work with Max. And if you would like

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to do so, the accessibilityadvantage.com. We are chatting

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with Maxwell Ivy, the blind blogger. Max, before we

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let you go, I have a couple questions that we like to ask everybody on

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the show. And, of course, this first question is basically the main

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topic of our entire conversation.

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Podcasting space where we

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could improve upon? Are there things that you would like to see done

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better, whether it's on creation, distribution, marketing, anything like

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that? I think it's the same answer I would give if we

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were talking about the broadcast media. We need more

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people with disabilities in front of cameras and microphones. We need

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more attention and more spotlights being placed on

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those people because there are lots of

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blind, deaf, hearing impaired, paraplegic, quadriplegic,

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lots of people with disabilities out there who have podcasts or are in the process

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of starting podcasts, but there still

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aren't a lot of, what's that expression, faces that look like

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mine are out there in the podcasting world.

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So I think that would be something that would be an improvement. More

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people with disabilities on stages at conferences would help,

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but there again, that's part with the event organizers and it's part

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with the disabled people because y'all can't say yes to us if

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we don't ask, you know? So I would say those would

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be the kind of things I would think about and, I just want

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to drop in a short little plug here for the for Chris Krivitsas and

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his team at FOD Fest Expo including Nick Bad with us because,

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they invited me to record a video they will be posting shortly to

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help their presenters understand how to create more accessible and

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inclusive slides and QR codes. And as part of that, I also

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told them about doing audio descriptions. So Podfest in

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January, there's a organization that's making the effort

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to have their event be inclusive, so I wanna get their name out there if

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that's okay. Absolutely. I love Chris. I've

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always been a fan of his and the work that he's done, and I've

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always enjoyed my times at Podfest Conferences and

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actually hoping that I got my chance to go down, this year in January to

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go, check out the the latest one that they are working on. So,

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always happy to give Chris and his team a shout out. They do some

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really, really great work. Alright. This one

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is, a little probably gonna be a little bit trickier as well, but is there

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any technology that you would like to get your hands on that

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would help you with podcasting? Whether it's whether it's

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something that exists that, you know, just might be out of your budget or

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something maybe that somebody needs to create for you?

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I think there are 2 things I wanna get my hands on for different reasons.

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The number one thing on my wish list is a digital braille

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display and what the way they work is you connect

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them with your your desktop or your mobile

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devices by bluetooth and they use a series

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of magnets and metal pins to simulate

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braille characters, and the reason I want one is because

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when I record my podcast, I have to memorize all this stuff. I

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have to create tricks for myself so that I can remember all

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this stuff, But if I had access to a digital braille

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display, I would be able to read whatever I needed to read

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to refresh my memory on while I'm interviewing or being

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interviewed without the screen reader, that computer voice,

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getting in the middle of the conversation. So that's like my number one thing,

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and then my my second thing would be I

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would really like to to find a,

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a camera that would allow me to do

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better as far as recording events when I'm away from my

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house. I've spoken at a couple of

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conferences where I don't have videos of great talks because they

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weren't recording and it's not really easy for me to set up to

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record. So having a mobile ad source for recording

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video and or audio would be the second thing on my list.

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You know, I'm gonna have a nice chat with you right after this conversation

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about just such an idea, so stay tuned for that. Hopefully, we can help you

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out on that front. Alright. I like that. I I hope you can. And,

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lastly, is there a podcast in your

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playlist right now that you are listening to that, you know, no matter what is

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happening, when the new episode comes out, episode comes out, you're stopping what you're listening

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to or dropping everything to go check it out? It can be more than 1

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podcast, too. Okay. The easy one is one called Your Own Pay.

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It's done by a good friend of mine named Michael Babcock from Oregon.

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He's been in the disability space for probably 35

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years or more and the reason I like it is because he's

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got all the scoop on all the latest technology

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and how that can be used or not be used by people

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with disabilities. He's the only guy in my community who is

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also an expert on Android as well as iOS when it comes

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to accessibility, and so he's continuing to be in my

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ear telling me, Max, you know Android's almost there, you need to start thinking about

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switching from your iPhone. So, your own pay is one of

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them and then, I would say

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the, for I can't think of the name of the podcast, but I

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always listen to Alex Sethilippo's podcast. Oh,

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yes. Alex is from PodMatch,

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Success Stories or ah, man, what is

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this podcast? You know what? Yeah. I know. It bothers me, and I I deserves

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to hear, he deserves the credit for his podcast. And pull

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his name up on LinkedIn. It's right there in his profile.

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Yeah. Oh, podcasting made simple. There you go. So Alex

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Sanfilippo at Podcasts Made Simple. He's he's been a

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mentor and a friend, and his podcast always

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includes such great guests and they they share stuff that you're like, okay,

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this this should be a good interview. And then you listen to it, you're like,

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wait a minute. That was so much more than I ever thought I was gonna

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get from this particular guest. I mean, he, he just rings them

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dry or they, they come in and empty their, their, their brains for

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them. I don't know how it works. I just know that, you know, that you

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just you just get so much every time you listen to one of his guests.

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Yeah. Alex is someone who, is doing a lot of very

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interesting things in the space and already chatting with him,

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trying to make sure we can get him on the show. So very glad you

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brought him up as well as our buddy, Chris Karmitza. So I'm I'm trying to

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get him on my show too because I've I've been the accessibility adviser

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to PodLottery at PodMatch now for a few years. And,

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you know, the, in his case, it's been longer than it probably would have

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been because they're continuing to grow and build upon what they

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started at, but, the thing about PodMatch is,

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I'm really impressed with the, not just the work they've done to make it

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accessible, but the the point of their heart as

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far as they really want this to be the best thing for

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podcasters, including podcasters who just have a disability and people with disabilities

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who want to be guests. So, you know, I've been I've been

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helping him out for a while now and,

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I want him to come on my podcast to talk about accessibility on his

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platform. And he's like, Max, check back with me in December.

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What? Okay. His, his tag guy is a gentleman

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named Jesse, and I don't know Jesse's last name. I'm sorry.

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But but I I I spend a lot of time back and forth with Jesse.

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I've been trying to get him on my podcast as well to talk about Pod

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Match and accessibility. And so far, I'm still in

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the, you know, just keep checking back with us, Max. When our schedule's

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open, we'll come. You know? So He is he is

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a rather busy guy, and the next

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chance I get to chat with him, I'll I'll nudge him to, you know, go

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on your podcast as well and, you know, make an

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appearance there. Once again, we've been chatting with Maxwell Ivy, the

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blind blogger, also an accessibility advantage. You can go to the

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accessibility advantage .com to check out the great

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work that he does. And just, you know, think about

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Max. He's out here trying to enjoy content, and he's not trying to

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make you pay an arm and a leg, you know, for your content to

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be more user friendly. He just wants it so that everybody

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can can enjoy it and, you know, share with the rest of the world. So,

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Max, thank you so much for taking the time and joining us and for doing

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what it is that you do. Well, thank you, Matthew. I appreciate you

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making a spot for me on the show and for understanding the value

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value or the prevent the potential value of accessibility to your

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audience. So thank you for that. Thanks for joining us today

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on podcasting tech. There are links to all the hardware and

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software that help power our guest content and podcasting

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tech available in the show notes and on our website at podcastingtech.com.

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You can also subscribe to the show on your favorite platform, connect with us on

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social media, and even leave a rating and review while you're there. Thanks,

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and we'll see you next time on Podcasting Tech.