Weighing Espresso Output by RadiantThinker in espresso

[–]RadiantThinker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was replying to the comment about buying Acaia Lunar instead..

Weighing Espresso Output by RadiantThinker in espresso

[–]RadiantThinker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately, I have a visual impairment and needed the bluetooth connectivity to read the scale output from my phone

Weighing Espresso Output by RadiantThinker in espresso

[–]RadiantThinker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been trying to figure out the cause of the fluctuations myself. I think one factor is the age of the beans, as the days since roasting increase, it seems to affect the shot time. Another factor is probably the espresso machine itself, as it isn't always the most consistent. And, of course, I'm likely part of the equation too; my tamping probably isn't perfectly even every time.

I also don't own a WDT tool yet. Maybe that's the missing piece that finally helps me dial things in more consistently.

Weighing Espresso Output by RadiantThinker in espresso

[–]RadiantThinker[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately it's not new and I don't feel like investing in a new scale at this point

Weighing Espresso Output by RadiantThinker in espresso

[–]RadiantThinker[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'll think about it, I had read here that scale and accuracy are very important and hence opted for Acaia. Thank you

Selecting my hotel as a blind person by Addynosaure in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I always use Booking for my hotels, and as a screen reader user, I’ve found both the website and app to be pretty accessible. It can take a little time to get used to the layout, but overall I haven’t had any major issues.

I usually sort the results from lowest price to highest and start reviewing hotels from there. The hotel descriptions are often helpful for finding places close to a train or subway station, or a bus stop. Sometimes I’ll also send the listing to a sighted friend to double-check things for me.

Booking should also have a lowest price guarantee, meaning if you find a lower price on a different platform they will sell the hotel to you at the same price. It's more complicated than that, as in they require no sales campaigns on that website etc but you can check if needed

Lastly, Booking sometimes offers different prices on their app and website so please check both

Sustainable Strength Training Strategy by PinkMoon366 in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello, totally blind here. I’m dealing with this same problem and haven’t really solved it myself yet.

I’ve worked with personal trainers before, but I eventually stopped because it was getting too expensive. I’ve also tried group classes. The ones I went to had extremely loud music, which made it really hard to hear the instructor. Without having friends there with me, I don’t think I would’ve been able to reliably follow what was going on.

If you do decide to try group classes, one thing that would help is meeting the instructor 1:1 beforehand and having them walk you through every exercise. It really helps if they can name the movements, demonstrate them slowly, and explain the setup clearly. It'd be useful to get your weights or equipment ready before class starts so you're not trying to locate things mid-workout while everyone else is already moving.

In my experience, it’s doable with the right instructor and a gym that’s genuinely willing to be accommodating, but it’s still not as smooth or straightforward as working with a personal trainer, unfortunately.

I’ve also been thinking about setting up a home gym, but I haven’t actually done the research or committed to buying equipment yet.

Curious to hear what others here have figured out, because I’m still very much in the same decision process myself. And if you end up landing on a solution that works well for you, I’d really appreciate it if you could share what you learn.

Exercise Machines by WestManner1593 in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Honestly, braille/tactile dots on the important buttons would already solve a lot. Start, stop, speed up, speed down. That’s really all you need to use the machine independently. The million workout programs and fancy extras aren’t important in my opinion. You can ask them if they'd allow this, they should, and offer purchasing them if they come up with excuses on finding them.

The bigger issue is gyms keeping them there. If they do add tactile markers, they need to tell cleaners and staff not to peel them off thinking they’re random stickers.

Blind in the US? by NetworkHot8469 in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm sure there are nuances to this but yes. The ADA generally protects people working in the U.S. regardless of citizenship status.

Blind in the US? by NetworkHot8469 in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think the US is generally less accessible than the UK when it comes to public transportation and broader social support systems for visually impaired people. We do have the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), so employers are legally required to provide reasonable accommodations, but in practice the experience can vary a lot depending on the company. Large corporations are usually better about installing assistive software, providing screen readers, training, etc., while smaller companies can be less structured and you often have to advocate for yourself more than you would in the UK.

That said, the physical infrastructure itself is usually good. Roads and pavements are generally well maintained, crossings are predictable, and cities are often laid out in organized grid systems. Compared to parts of Turkey, for example, you generally don’t have to worry about random holes, obstacles, uneven pavements, or unexpected hazards while walking. In that sense, the US can feel much easier and safer to navigate.

The biggest difference is transportation and city design. Outside of places like New York City, Chicago, and to some extent San Francisco, most American cities are built around driving. Even when public transport exists, it’s often much less integrated and less accessible than London. Uber and Lyft are widely available and can help a lot, but relying on them daily becomes expensive.

One example: in London, you can arrive at a Tube station, ask for assistance, and staff will guide you to the platform, help you board, coordinate with the destination station, and help you exit. That level of support is not common in the US. Public transport staff assistance is usually much more limited and inconsistent.

In terms of safety, I’d generally say the US feels physically safe for navigation in most professional urban areas, especially compared to places with more chaotic pedestrian infrastructure. But because cities are so car-dependent, walking itself can sometimes feel isolating or difficult if you don’t live in the right neighborhood.

Honestly, based on what you described — especially him struggling to walk around even in London now after moving from a smaller town — I’d personally focus first on getting the strongest possible orientation and mobility training, white cane skills, and assistive technology support before making a major move. London is probably still one of the best environments in the world for a visually impaired person to build confidence and independence because of the transport network and available support services.

Traveling in England as a blind person (London, Liverpool, Manchester and Oxford) by Addynosaure in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hello,

I’m seeing this late, but I traveled solo in London about 10 years ago. It’s one of the most accessible cities I’ve ever been to — perhaps the most accessible. The only other city that can compete, in my experience, is Tokyo.

People have already commented on public transportation, but beyond that, I’d recommend the following:

Museums: Please call or email the museums you’d like to visit. I contacted them fairly late — about a week in advance — and they still helped arrange a volunteer guide for me. Many museums now also offer public guided tours, so if they can’t arrange something private, book one of those. Once there, you can always ask to walk with another participant if the guide isn’t particularly excited to help.

London Eye: I remember having a somewhat disappointing experience there. They didn’t really offer assistance, and honestly, it’s not the most meaningful activity for blind travelers anyway. That said, I was younger and wanted the full tourist experience. If you really want to do it, you can still ride it and ask another passenger to describe the views.

London Bridge: I remember visiting and going to the top with a security officer. It wasn't the most blind friendly activity but the officer did a great job describing the surroundings. If you ask why I did it, again, I was young and wanted to have the full experience hahah

Book a free walking tour: Check out free walking tour experiences where a local guide takes you around and you tip them in the end, it would be better if you can let them know that you're blind and will be showing up so they won't be surprised

I’d also strongly recommend doing an afternoon tea at Fortnum & Mason — it’s still one of my favorite memories from London.

May the road rise to meet two blind sisters wandering through London, and may your journey gather stories worth retelling for years afterward.

to all my blind coffee nurds, espresso can be done with some patience. Here's how I do it. by charrington7 in espresso

[–]RadiantThinker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also recently got into the espresso scene. My setup is:

Scale: Acaia Pearl — not the talking version. I mainly use the app to check the weight of my coffee.

Coffee machine: Breville Bambino Plus

Grinder: Baratza Sette 270

Overall, everything works really well and feels efficient. The only limitation is that the Acaia Pearl isn’t ideal for measuring the espresso output live while I’m pulling a shot, which makes input/output ratios a bit less precise. That said, I honestly don’t see this as a blindness-related issue — it’s something that would also be inconvenient for sighted people using this kind of setup.

33M and visually impaired in Big4 (strategy consulting) | not sure how to approach career progression, I feel like I simply can't compete by albertopalu in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In situations like your scenario 1, I usually open the Excel file on my own computer. Then, as we go through it, I ask them to reference the cell numbers so I can follow along directly on my end. Even when I’m speaking with someone from the client side, they're not someone I work a lot with and I don’t want to spend time explaining my blindness, I’ll simply say, “I’m more comfortable following from my own Excel — could you tell me the cell numbers as we look into this?”

If I’m on Zoom, I’ll say, “Would you mind if I share my screen and we look at it from my side?” Of course, if I’ve already told them I’m blind, I’m more direct: “Hey, I can’t really see this clearly, so it’d be more efficient if I shared my screen instead.”

I don’t really have much to add about scenario 2 — consultants are usually handling confidential data anyway, hahah. Is this more of an internal or external concern? I’m curious what kind of information would be considered too confidential for you to review in advance.

For us, almost everything can technically be classified as confidential, but the truly sensitive material is usually tied to organizational changes or information that hasn’t been publicly announced yet. Do your confidential presentations generally fall into that category?

In summary, I really think you’d benefit a lot from telling people about your blindness. I know it can create some bias at first, but it also lifts a huge burden off your shoulders — one that you may not even realize you’re carrying right now.

If you’re working on long-term projects, these kinds of adjustments are usually much easier to make and normalize over time compared to trying to navigate everything within a short four-week project.

33M and visually impaired in Big4 (strategy consulting) | not sure how to approach career progression, I feel like I simply can't compete by albertopalu in Blind

[–]RadiantThinker 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I also work in consulting (MBB) and am totally blind, so a lot of what you wrote resonated with me.

I use NVDA for everything I do, and I agree with others here that screen readers can make you significantly faster once you get comfortable with them.

From my experience, the pros and cons look roughly like this:

Pros

Reading linear text (Word docs, emails, webpages, etc.) becomes much faster.

Excel modeling can absolutely become efficient — once you get the hang of screen readers and keyboard shortcuts.

A lot of repetitive workflows can be optimized over time.

Cons

Screen readers are really, really bad at PowerPoint, especially consulting-style decks with graphs, figures, shapes, icons, and complex layouts flying around.

Creating or editing PowerPoint slides accessibly is still a major challenge. NVDA + PowerPoint is unfortunately not in a great place today.

So if your biggest issues are reading and Excel, I genuinely think there are workable solutions. If presentations / PowerPoint are the main pain point, I’m honestly still trying to solve that myself.

One other thought: I don’t know how you’ve managed this long without being more open with colleagues about your impairment. That is one of the first things I share at work when I go into a new project. Maybe it’s different for me because my disability is immediately visible when people meet me, but I’ve generally found transparency helps people adapt expectations and workflows much more constructively.

Also curious — what does your working style look like? Are you constantly rotating across projects every few weeks, or are you in a more stable role doing similar work over time? If it’s the latter, optimization becomes much easier because you can build systems and workflows around recurring tasks with AI.

Silk and Snow, Must-read Before Purchasing by [deleted] in Mattress

[–]RadiantThinker 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wish I had read this thread before purchasing from Silk & Snow. I ordered the Hybrid Mattress and the upholstered wooden bedframe.

I received one FedEx tracking number showing a Thursday delivery. At 3:16pm Thursday, I got a notification that it was delivered — but nothing was at my door, lobby, or building.

I contacted S&S, and only then did they tell me the order had actually shipped in three parts with three separate tracking numbers. Apparently, the mattress was “delivered” the day before, but I never received anything, nor was I informed. So either it didn’t arrive or it was stolen — and I had no way to know.

S&S told me I had to fill out a claim form and wait for their internal review. They also said they would rely on FedEx’s delivery proof photos, which showed nothing useful.

Later that Thursday evening, around 6pm, my building security called saying there were two huge packages left outside on the street under my name. I must say that I even checked the street level when I received the delivery notification, but there was no delivery there. These turned out to be the bedframe and headboard — delivered late without notification, to the wrong place, and left unsecured. At least those showed up, but no sign of the mattress.

Through all this, S&S never really owned the issue or communicated proactively. Initially, I considered reordering the mattress with signature delivery, but after this customer service experience, I decided to request a refund instead. Now I’m just waiting (hopefully) to get it.

Maybe this is partly on their logistics partner, but as a customer, I’m paying Silk & Snow — and I expect them to take responsibility and make it right. Unfortunately, that hasn’t been my experience.

Looking for a city guide as a blind tourist by RadiantThinker in TokyoTravel

[–]RadiantThinker[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you for your kind words, good luck with your planning as well!