image description
An infographic titled “How To Write Alt Text” featuring a photo of a capybara. Parts of alt text are divided by color, including “identify who”, “expression”, “description”, “colour”, and “interesting features”. The finished description reads “A capybara looking relaxed in a hot spa. Yellow yuzu fruits are floating in the water, and one is balanced on the top of the capybara’s head.”
via https://www.perkins.org/resource/how-write-alt-text-and-image-descriptions-visually-impaired/
A capybara in the library with a candlestick.
He was definitely the murderer
1 + 1 + 2 + 1
A true classic
Bro I fucking love capybaras so much
10/10 animal, fucking brilliant.
my favourite animal
the carbonara
I like how “description” is one of the components of the… description.
See also: self referential
goes to dictionary entry for “recursion”
This is excellent, very useful for continuing to make images accessible on the fediverse
Me writing alt text: Time is a flat circle. God is a sock.
Reminds me of my git commit messages!
Nothing but crucial intel
Just as important is “decorative images” where you explicitly leave the alt empty https://www.w3.org/WAI/tutorials/images/decorative/
You know those little [] that appear when you upload an image? You can put alt-text in there.
Ignorant question: isn’t alt text primarily for visually impaired people? If so, what is the point of including info about color?
Color can provide useful context. For example, in the case of this image, imagine if in a thread about it there was some discussion of the ripeness of the yuzu fruit.
You can also become visually impaired at points other than birth in life, and know colours and stuff
That’s a very good point!
Is this not the kind of thing machine vision/language models would be really good at?