Prot Asks: Arkadiusz about blindness, Emacspeak, Hyperbole, Chinese and Slavic culture
Raw link: YouTube OR Internet Archive
In this 2-hour video I talk with Arkadiusz about how he uses the computer as a blind person. We also cover a range of other issues, from cultural values to topics of artificial intelligence. Much of our conversation revolves around the use of Emacs, which empowers Arkadiusz to do much of his computing.
Emacs has a package called emacspeak, which provides an audio
interface to the computer. Arkadiusz explains how this is a powerful
piece of technology because it benefits greatly from the
introspectability and extensibility of Emacs. I get an idea of how
emacspeak works and how it can augment the experience by giving
feedback about the given context.
Another Emacs package that has context-aware functionality is
hyperbole. Arkadiusz considers it an excellent addition to his
workflow. With hyperbole Arkadiusz has developed the intuition to
quickly act on so-called “implicit buttons”, which are portions of
text that hyperbole can do something useful on. There also are
“explicit buttons”, which Arkadiusz has designed himself to perform
actions that streamline his workflow.
As we gradually move away from discussing Emacs, I ask Arkadiusz about his study of Chinese. He tells me the experience he had back in Poland, his native country, and how he was able to continue his studies in Italy. Part of this discussion covers Arkadiusz’s blindness and describes how he showed strength of character to not let a setback derail his life.
I then want to learn more about the connection between Chinese and Slavic cultures. Arkadiusz suggests that there are some shared values between the two cultures, even though politics may sometimes get in the way. I learn how people value virtues such as hard work and honesty. To this end, I comment that the ethos is essentially about not settling for mediocrity when you can have excellence.
Our discussion continues into accessibility beyond the computer. Arkadiusz tells me how it is to live as a blind person and how one depends on the infrastructure being accessible. To illustrate the point, Arkadiusz tells me that he could never live like me alone in the mountains, even if he likes to, because some of the essentials for him would not be available. Along those lines, Arkadiusz shares his thoughts about not overly protecting people, such as in the case of special schools, as that tends to have adverse long-term effects: people have to be exposed to society at-large and thus need to be able to cope with it.
As we continue talking, we eventually get to the point of Artificial Intelligence, which Arkadiusz correctly distinguishes from machine learning. I want to learn what Arkadiusz thinks about the present state of affairs. Arkadiusz explains his moral reservations about AI and how, fundamentally, it being controlled by a handful of corporations is harmful. We discuss several related issues along those lines, including matters of personal creativity.
Links from Arkadiusz
These pertain to a talk Arkadiusz gave at the Pragma 2025 conference about using the computer as a blind person.
- Pragma video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ry77etLCAfg.
- Presentation repository: https://github.com/Nuno69/Pragma2025.
About “Prot Asks”
In this video series, I talk to anybody who is interested to have a video call with me (so do contact me if you want!). The topics cover anything related to Emacs, technology, and life in general. More here: https://protesilaos.com/prot-asks.