In reply to @bryansmart.

@bryansmart @matt @cordova5029 @simon This is true, but now you have a 2+generation situation that you'd have to undo before they could become a drop-in. This would maybe be fixable if we were 10 years in, but 50+60 years is an incredible gap to bridge and I'm not sure anyone with enough resources has the willpower for that. To say nothing of what you do for the multidisability kids you'd necessarily have to displace.

In reply to @matt.

@matt @miki @bryansmart @cordova5029 @simon I'd have to double check specific companies, but I think in most cases it's been more like all the accessibility contractors were cut while in-house teams stayed. That's completely sidestepping the bit about no one actually listening t o their in-house accessibility teams but that's a road I don't want to go down because frankly I'll just go on for hours lol.

@rolle I am part of the generation that knew Jabber, that was happy to see Google embrace the Jabber/XMPP protocol: anyone with a gmail address had an XMPP instant messaging account interoperable with all other servers.

And one day gmail closed to other servers. Most users, already on Google, then asked others to create a gmail account to continue communicating.

I don’t want to go through that again. “Embrace, extend, and extinguish”, again.

@lebout2canap