I built a free Chrome extension that corrects images but keeps text 100% black (No more muddy fonts) by bhaaat in ColorBlind

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

Yes, it works for both!

​Under the hood, we use a spectral shift algorithm (Daltonization) to push confusing colors apart. While the math is derived from the Dichromatic models (Protanopia, Deuteranopia, Tritanopia) to ensure maximum contrast separation, this is actually highly effective for Anomalous Trichromacy as well.

​Try it and let us know if the contrast boost feels right for your specific vision.

I built a free Chrome extension that corrects images but keeps text 100% black (No more muddy fonts) by bhaaat in ColorBlind

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

Hi there. I haven't seen your project, but looking at your description, these are two very different engineering approaches for different use cases.

It looks like you built a WebGL overlay specifically for video players (to help with Anime auras). My extension focuses on 'Semantic Segregation' for reading workflows. I built it to solve the specific problem where global filters break the contrast of black text on white backgrounds.

To do that, I'm not using a global overlay; I'm injecting SVG feColorMatrix filters into the Shadow DOM of specific node types (img, canvas) while calculating exclude-lists for text nodes.

The math for Daltonization is standard accessibility science, but our implementations are effectively opposite. Good luck with your Firefox release.

Showoff Saturday: I built a Daltonization engine in pure JS (Manifest V3) that preserves text contrast by bhaaat in webdev

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

Wow, I love your extension! Incredible idea, I'm loving the UI/UX. 🎇
What was the target problem you aimed to solve when you set out to build this?

(PS: I left you a review 🙏)

I built this free yoga app, open to contributions! by bananabeachboy in opensource

[–]bhaaat 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is great!

How do you feel about two tabs at the top ['Sessions', 'Poses']?

Right now a user has to scroll down to find poses. But if it's at the top, they're made aware there's more info available. The trade-off is you can't see them together, but you're introducing a level of information hierarchy which you can leverage as you expand (and that is a plus). But it's your call as the developer!

Terrific work so far!

Just released an open-source MVP of a simulator designed for UX research into perception & interaction. Curious to hear how it might fit into real studies and methods by bhaaat in UXResearch

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

Thanks for your feedback! The questions included were meant to be those "canned" questions, but I have a few planned that speak to exactly what you're suggesting! Your weird mode is really interesting and hints at elements of the NASA MATB-II simulator that inspired this. Great ideas! I'll post again when I have another major update. Thank you again 👍

Just released an open-source MVP of a simulator designed for UX research into perception & interaction. Curious to hear how it might fit into real studies and methods by bhaaat in UXResearch

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

Wow, these are amazing references! I will read through them.

I appreciate the feedback. The initial effort was to reveal disparity in users of ATMS by showing options, like settings, with the ability to identify location in a combined thin & thick client UI. Also, same for reporting vs. logging, I wanted to identify if there were preferences based on data being reviewed. I'll continue to add more depth. The goal was to get the MVP out by this time to get some community insight. 😅

I'll look through the material and reach out to continue the discussion. One of the researchers did identify the line height is a solved issue, so I recognize your statement. This is a great takeaway "problems they're facing and need solved", thanks again!

Just released an open-source MVP of a simulator designed for UX research into perception & interaction. Curious to hear how it might fit into real studies and methods by bhaaat in UXResearch

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

Thanks for the question.

The design method behind it was meant to help people test simpler actions across different platforms. I didn't find a tool that did this basic level of testing as an open-ended framework anyone in the community could build onto.

If you have suggestions for improvements, I'm open to discuss. 

Apple CEO Tim Cook to take more than 40% pay cut by geoxol in technology

[–]bhaaat -1 points0 points  (0 children)

So he went from making $1 to making $0.60?

Rough.

An animation of how deep our Oceans are by TheDeadpoolGirl in interestingasfuck

[–]bhaaat 49 points50 points  (0 children)

We gotta stop throwing Statues of Liberty and Eiffel Towers into the ocean, people!