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Software

Screenshot of a white, fuschia, and black-colored program interface with the words "Accessibyte Arcade." In the center, there is the word "Start" in classic arcade font.

Collection of nine interactive and accessible computer games designed for students with learning disabilities, cognitive disabilities, or who are blind.

Step by step example of producing an embossed braille image, starting with a picture of a hawk in the top left. In step 2 the color picture is a pixel outline of the hawk. The final step creates the embosser version.

A free program that produces braille graphics files.

Laptop with display opened and showing a screenshot of a 10-letter word, control buttons below it, and two columns on the right with words in them.

A speech-enabled word game for Microsoft Windows.

Cutout photos of people dancing on a gray floor with a red brick wall behind them.

A switch friendly music program for special needs learners.

A white smartphone with an image of a black microphone inside a grid of small rectangles against a background of a blue circle with two lighter blue bands around it.

A speech recognition app for iOS devices that enables users to speak into the microphone and convert their speech into text and then directly send the message to an email program, SMS, WhatsApp, Twitter or Facebook.

A dark blue background with a white and red envelope graphic.

Voice-output app that allows users to listen to emails read out loud. The app is gesture-based and was designed to help users quickly sort through unread mail in their inboxes.

A dark blue background with a white and red open book graphic.

Uses text-to-speech (TTS) to read digital articles, documents, and books out loud.

Screenshot of main screen with menu button options across the top, a text input window below on the left, and a corrections window on the right.

A writing tool designed to help writers of all skill levels. It helps users compose small amounts of content prior to posting them to an application. 

Square app logo with red on top the lowercase word wait, with blue on the bottom and the number 4 next to the black lettering it in a white box.

An app designed for use by individuals with communication and autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) to help teach the concept of “wait” and encourage learners to wait successfully.

Green vertical horizontal image with examples of the Tiresias font letters and numbers.

A low vision font family designed to have characters that are easy to distinguish from each other, which is especially important for the visually impaired.