GitHub today revealed it added several capabilities to make it easier for developers with disabilities to access its code repository platform. The new capabilities were announced to coincide with Global Accessibility Awareness Day.
Capabilities highlighted include a navigation tool and a search tool that can be used with a screen reader that GitHub provides.
In addition, GitHub’s contribution graph has been updated to remove barriers for keyboard-only and screen reader users.
Finally, GitHub has made site-wide color contrast improvements to the light and dark themes presented by Primer, the GitHub Design System.
Ed Summers, head of accessibility for GitHub, said there are more than 1.3 billion individuals with a wide variety of disabilities that could, with access to the right tools, write code. That community today, however, is underrepresented as a percentage of the larger IT community, he noted.
However, as tools such as GitHub Copilot—a generative artificial intelligence (AI) tool that helps developers write better, more secure code—is paired with GitHub Copilot Voice—a speech interface for GitHub Copilot that is available in technical preview—the GitHub platform becomes more accessible to developers with disabilities, he said.
Generative AI coupled with a speech interface that eliminates the need for a keyboard is lowering the barrier for entry for every potential developer. But for individuals with disabilities, it represents a tremendous advance, noted Summers. Anyone who understands how code should be constructed can build an application, he added.
It’s not clear what impact generative AI will have on the global shortage of developer talent that has persisted for decades but it’s clear the pace at which applications can be developed is about to dramatically increase. In addition, many organizations have embraced working from home in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. That shift makes it easier for many individuals with disabilities to become part of the workforce because they no longer need to commute to an office.
Generative AI platforms are fundamentally changing the way humans interact with machines. Instead of requiring a developer to create a level of abstraction to communicate with a machine, it’s now possible for machines to understand the language humans use to communicate with each other. Via a natural language interface, developers will soon be asking generative AI platforms to not only surface suggestions but also debug applications and write the code used to create an application.
At this point, like it or not, the generative AI genie is out of the proverbial bottle. Just about every job function imaginable will be impacted to varying degrees. In the case of DevOps teams, the ultimate impact should involve less drudgery as many of the manual tasks that conspire to make managing DevOps workflows tedious are eliminated.
It may be a while before the impact of generative AI is fully appreciated, and there will certainly be more advances to come that will be applicable to individuals with disabilities. In the meantime, however, many members of a DevOps team may not even realize a member of the team has a disability as the writing of code continues to be increasingly automated.