I sometimes use "regular" rather than normal, but perhaps "inaccessible" or "undescribed" is a reasonable term for this concept?
Otherwise ob-outrage at inaccessibility of access information. Also how much non-disableds don't understand the reason for us wanting details. I have spreadsheets comparing the relative merits of UK live Speech to Text Reporters (STTRs) [called CART in the USA] cos I can tell the differences between the humans and some are better than others (faster, more accurate). I am quite tolerant of errors (which tend to be phoneticised) so I say "speed over accuracy" whereas other deaf, esp BSL users who don't think English-phonetically are less able to be tolerant so would need accuracy over speed. Wheelchair using friends need other specific info and there's differences between 'accessible' and 'friendly'. Something can be technically wheelchair accessible but not quite spacious enough, or takes ages to get into, whereas friendly is so easy you don't think about it...
Can I be cheeky and ask to read your essay when you get the results? I know so little about audio description and what an auditory-focused blind person's experience of it might be (cos I know you're not all blind people).
Sending you motivation and spoons for finishing the fucking thing as well!
no subject
Otherwise ob-outrage at inaccessibility of access information. Also how much non-disableds don't understand the reason for us wanting details. I have spreadsheets comparing the relative merits of UK live Speech to Text Reporters (STTRs) [called CART in the USA] cos I can tell the differences between the humans and some are better than others (faster, more accurate). I am quite tolerant of errors (which tend to be phoneticised) so I say "speed over accuracy" whereas other deaf, esp BSL users who don't think English-phonetically are less able to be tolerant so would need accuracy over speed. Wheelchair using friends need other specific info and there's differences between 'accessible' and 'friendly'. Something can be technically wheelchair accessible but not quite spacious enough, or takes ages to get into, whereas friendly is so easy you don't think about it...
Can I be cheeky and ask to read your essay when you get the results? I know so little about audio description and what an auditory-focused blind person's experience of it might be (cos I know you're not all blind people).
Sending you motivation and spoons for finishing the fucking thing as well!