I know the main takeaway here is "tech bros trying to reinvent trains" but I also wanna point out how so many of these "services" function on the idea that everyone has the same amount of stuff, money, and mobility to use them.
I know the main takeaway here is "tech bros trying to reinvent trains" but I also wanna point out how so many of these "services" function on the idea that everyone has the same amount of stuff, money, and mobility to use them.
I’m Totally Accessible (There’s Just One Step)
She’s My Wife, Not My Nurse
You Have the Keys to My Heart (and the Elevator)
It’s Really None of Your Business
Slow Down, Speed Racer (So You Can Stab Me)
I Totally Know What It’s Like (The Ballad of the Broken Ankle)
I’m Totally Accessible (There’s Just One Step)
She’s My Wife, Not My Nurse
You Have the Keys to My Heart (and the Elevator)
It’s Really None of Your Business
Slow Down, Speed Racer (So You Can Stab Me)
I Totally Know What It’s Like (The Ballad of the Broken Ankle)
“What emerges as the most elementary insight is that, since we do not now have any ways of making computers wise, we ought not now to give computers tasks that demand wisdom.”
“What emerges as the most elementary insight is that, since we do not now have any ways of making computers wise, we ought not now to give computers tasks that demand wisdom.”
Feel free to submit a question if you have one.
Feel free to submit a question if you have one.
To able‐bodied people, wheelchair users have a certain mystique. They’re constantly asking us about how our bodies do or don’t work, whether we can have sex, why we haven't just killed ourselves yet.
To able‐bodied people, wheelchair users have a certain mystique. They’re constantly asking us about how our bodies do or don’t work, whether we can have sex, why we haven't just killed ourselves yet.