A blue, rounded electronic device with yellow tactile buttons arranged in a Braille-style dot pattern is placed in front of two product boxes labeled 'BrailleTeach'. The device is an electronic Braille learning tool designed to help users learn Braille independently. The packaging features a stylized image of the device, a red six-dot Braille symbol, and the tagline 'Learn Braille in 3 months', with colorful circular graphics in the background.

From Baku to the World: The BrailleTeach Story — Aliyev, Burchell, Vaid, Dickinson & George

Here, Aaron Di Blasi spotlights BrailleTeach—a multilingual, audio-guided handheld trainer built around six oversized toggles laid out like a Braille cell—as a practical answer to stalled early Braille literacy where teachers and budgets are scarce. Rooted in a 2016 encounter with a newly blind adult and focused on “dignity through literacy,” the device pairs touch with voice prompts across eight modes for letters, numbers, and symbols, adds one-minute challenges for speed, and aims to take learners through the basics in roughly three months. It’s lightweight (~250 g) with speaker and headphone jack, recharges via micro-USB, ships today in US/UK English, German, Spanish, Azerbaijani, and Russian (Arabic and Turkish in development), and is meant to complement—not replace—teachers. The need is urgent, framed by large, under-served populations and constrained classroom realities.

Read More
Two women are joyfully taking selfies against a plain beige background, both smiling widely with excited expressions; the older woman on the left has straight, shoulder-length blonde hair and wears a light gray sweater while holding a blue phone, and the younger woman on the right has dark hair pulled back, wears an orange shirt over a white top, and holds a gray phone.

Family Perspectives on Technology Across Generations

Here, Vicki Walton turns a family gathering into a multigenerational reflection on how technology both empowers and excludes. A web accessibility specialist and IT QA tester, Walton evaluates digital tools with assistive tech like screen readers and voice navigation yet admits even “computer people” can feel overwhelmed by the pace of change. This personal vantage point frames perspectives from their pre-internet mother, Gen Z daughter, and boomer-age sister and wife, contrasting technology’s efficiency with the frictions and anxieties it creates in everyday life.

Read More
Blue background with 'Connect Alt' in white. To the left are Braille dots forming the letters C and A. Below, in white text: 'One-stop hub for blind and low vision resources.'

Introducing ConnectAlt: The BLV Community’s One-Stop, Accessible Calendar, Built by and for the BLV Community

Here Aaron Di Blasi introduces ConnectAlt as the BLV community’s one-stop, accessible hub for discovering events, programs, and resources, framing it as the practical answer to the weekly “Where do I find what’s next?” question. He explains how ConnectAlt centralizes fragmented information into a searchable calendar with filters by keyword, date, organization, and location (including virtual), and why that matters now. The article spotlights the team, creator/co-founder Lucie Courtois (who is blind), with co-founders Carol Trapani and Ella Deshautreaux, clarifying how lived experience, community leadership, and day-to-day operational rigor combine to make a national aggregation effort credible. He discloses that ConnectAlt has joined Top Tech Tidbits as a Sponsor while affirming Tidbits’ not-for-profit, editorial independence and noting ConnectAlt’s sustainability exploration (sponsorships, org-side analytics/featured placements, grants, and potential API access) with core access remaining free.

Read More
Centered on a white background, the image features bold black text reading 'PWD' above smaller text that says 'Media Distribution Co-op'. Surrounding the text are colorful, diamond-shaped icons of various social media platforms, including recognizable logos such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, TikTok, Snapchat, and Messenger, arranged in a scattered pattern. The image conveys a theme of media connectivity and distribution across multiple digital platforms.

Introducing The PWD Media Distribution Co-op: A One-of-a-Kind Business Resource For Consistently Reaching The Largest Audience of Persons With Disabilities In The World Today

Here, Aaron Di Blasi announces the launch of the PWD Media Distribution Cooperative—an invitation-only, low-cost syndication network created to amplify disability-focused content by pooling the LinkedIn and Facebook Page audiences of trusted partners. Sparked by an introduction to Dr. Kirk Adams and a guest spot on the Heart of Influence show, Di Blasi and Adams aligned their networks (with partners like Donna J. Jodhan) and now use Hootsuite to schedule posts across the combined channels. Together, the co-op can reach more than 150,000 disability-specific readers across roughly 27 channels, positioning it as one of the largest and most targeted distribution networks serving the disability community.

Read More
A promotional graphic for the book titled 'REFOCUS: The Essential Guide to Living a Happy and Successful Life with Vision Loss' features a black background with large white text and a stylized eye chart below the title, displaying progressively smaller letters. The authors' names, Shawn Maloney and Victoria Nolan, are listed in bold at the bottom left. The image is divided into four quadrants: the top right shows a smiling Shawn Maloney in a light shirt against a plain backdrop; the bottom right shows Victoria Nolan with a ponytail facing sideways, wearing a red and white 'Rowing Canada Aviron' jacket with a maple leaf on the collar.

Refocus: The Guide Shawn Maloney & Victoria Nolan Wished Existed — And Why the Access Community Needs It Now

Here, Aaron Di Blasi introduces Refocus: The Essential Guide to Living a Happy and Successful Life with Vision Loss as the plain-English, whole-life handbook our ecosystem has been missing, written by people who’ve walked the road and know where the potholes are. Co-authors Victoria Nolan (four-time Paralympian, educator, AMI TV co-host, and CNIB leader) and Shawn Maloney (legally blind researcher-educator with eye-health and tech credentials) built a staged framework, the Seven A’s of Vision Loss: Acceptance, Attitude, Adaptation, Awareness, Advocacy, Accessibility, and Achievement, and a two-track method (mindset + mechanics) that turns uncertainty into action. The piece explains why this lived-authority + how-to blend matters now, and argues that the framework travels beyond blindness to other disability journeys because the underlying moves are universal.

Read More
A blue background with white text reading 'Braille GPT' and 'AI-powered speech-to-Braille device' is shown alongside a black handheld device with a blue screen displaying 'Welcome to BrailleGPT', four circular buttons below the screen, and a six-dot Braille cell interface beneath them.

BrailleGPT: How Dunya Hassan Is Teaching AI to Speak the Language of Touch

Here, Aaron Di Blasi, PR Director for AT-Newswire and Publisher of Top Tech Tidbits, introduces BrailleGPT. A groundbreaking, portable, AI-native speech-to-Braille device designed specifically for DeafBlind users. Developed by 20-year-old innovator Dunya Hassan, BrailleGPT captures live speech, processes it with on-device AI for context and clarity, and instantly renders it as tactile Braille on a refreshable display. Aaron outlines the access gap this device seeks to close, noting that mainstream AI assumes sight or hearing and leaves the DeafBlind community reliant on costly, tethered equipment or human intermediaries. Hassan’s vision is to combine portability, privacy, and contextual intelligence into one affordable unit, empowering users to access spoken information anywhere, on their own terms.

Read More
Promotional image for a ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode workshop featuring a green background with the ChatGPT logo centered at the top, flanked by the words 'ADVANCED' on the left and 'VOICE MODE' on the right. Below, three smartphone screens display features of the advanced voice mode: the first screen introduces AVM with points about natural conversations, multiple voices, and personalization; the second shows a voice selection screen with the voice 'Sol'; the third displays an AVM loading screen. At the bottom corners are circular headshots: on the left, Dr. Kirk Adams in a dark blazer outdoors, and on the right, Aaron Di Blasi in a suit and tie against a gray backdrop.

SYBL-TDI Blind and Low-Vision Workshop by Dr. Kirk Adams and Aaron Di Blasi: ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode Demonstration: Cutting Edge AI For The Blind: How We’re Using It | June 26, 2025 | Live on LinkedIn | Recording and Transcript Available After The Workshop

Discover how ChatGPT Advanced Voice Mode empowers blind and low-vision users with real-time emotional AI, voice interaction, and visual grounding. Join Dr. Kirk Adams and Aaron Di Blasi for a groundbreaking demo and learn how this cutting-edge tech enhances accessibility, productivity, and inclusion.

Read More