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Makes the popular game Wordle accessible to screen-reader users. This extension makes some modifications to Wordle, found at https://www.powerlanguage.co.uk/wordle/, so that it works better for screen reader users. To use it, just install the extension, then visit Wordle and reload the page if necessary. Tested with VoiceOver on macOS and JAWS on Windows, should work with other screen readers too. The authors of this extension are not affiliated in any way with the authors of Wordle.
Wordle
Play Wordle whenever you want with this popup chrome extension Guess the Wordle in six tries. Each guess must be a valid five-letter word. Hit the enter button to submit. After each guess, the color of the tiles will change. Yellow means the letter is in the word but not in that position, green means that letter is in the word and in the correct position. This game is a popup chrome extension, click on the extension's icon to open a popup window.
Finch
Hear your browser — short audio cues for tabs, downloads, bookmarks, and navigation. 65 events, per-event controls, zero tracking. # Finch — a songbird for your browser Finch plays short audio cues when things happen in your browser. A tab opens. A download finishes. A page loads. A bookmark gets saved. Instead of checking the screen for visual indicators, you hear it. Named after the bird. Finches are small songbirds known for their varied, distinctive calls — each species has its own song. This extension works the same way: each browser event gets its own short, recognizable sound. ## Who this is for The primary audience is blind and low-vision users. Screen readers announce page content well, but they miss the smaller state changes that sighted users catch from visual motion: a download icon flashing, a tab indicator changing, a bookmark turning yellow. Finch fills that gap with short audio cues. If you're not a screen-reader user, Finch is still useful as ambient feedback for what your browser is doing — handy when pages load in background tabs, downloads run while you work in another window, or you have too many tabs to track visually. ## What you hear 64 events on Chrome, 59 on Firefox, across three tiers. Pick the detail level you want. Tier 1 — Essential (25 on Chrome, 26 on Firefox — enabled by default): tab created, tab closed, tab switched, page loading, page loaded, navigation error, download started, download complete, download failed, bookmark added, bookmark removed, window opened, window closed, window focused, tab title changed, extension installed, and more. The events most people want out of the box. Firefox includes a notification-shown event not available on Chrome. Tier 2 — Useful (37 on Chrome, 32 on Firefox — opt-in): tab muted/unmuted, tab pinned, tab zoomed, URL visited, history cleared, system idle, system locked, omnibox interactions, cookie changes. Chrome adds tab groups and tab-replaced events. Useful for specific workflows; each one requires a one-time permission prompt. Tier 3 — Advanced (2 on Chrome, 1 on Firefox — off by default): events that fire frequently enough to be noisy. Useful for debugging or very specific monitoring needs. Per-event debounce suppresses rapid duplicates — a page rewriting its title several times during load only triggers one cue. The Sound Events tab in the options page lists every event with individual controls: - Enable or disable each event independently. - Volume from 0% to 100%. - Pitch from 0.5x to 2.0x. - Preview any sound without enabling the event. A master volume and master mute apply across all events. A separate "mute when unfocused" toggle silences cues whenever no browser window has focus — useful if you switch to another application and don't want stray sounds. Sounds are organized into themes. Finch ships with the Pulse theme — short, clean cues designed to sit under a screen reader's voice without competing. Events that don't have a dedicated sound in the active theme fall back to a tier-based default. Custom theme import is planned for a future release. Browsers fire events in bursts. Clicking a link can produce navigation-starting, page-loading, navigation-committed, DOM-ready, and page-loaded in under a second — five events for one user action. Playing all five sounds would be overwhelming. Finch handles this with: - A global cooldown (~150 ms) that suppresses cascading events while letting you hear the first one. - Priority preemption: higher-priority events (errors, page-loaded) can break through the cooldown window. - Per-event debounce for events that rapid-fire on their own. You hear the meaningful events, not every internal state change. Finch does not play music or continuous audio. It does not read page content — your screen reader handles that. It does not block ads, modify pages, inject scripts, or observe what you do on websites. It does not request access to any website's content. It listens to browser API events (tabs, bookmarks, downloads, navigation) and plays a short sound. That's it. No telemetry. No analytics. No crash reports. No accounts. No third-party services. No CDN fetches. All settings are stored locally in the browser's own extension storage and never leave your machine. Sound files ship inside the extension package. An optional local log server for developers runs on localhost:8089 and is off by default. - Alt+M — toggle mute - Alt+Shift+M — toggle mute-when-unfocused - Alt+Shift+C — open the options page Inside the popup and options page: - Alt+T — cycle through sound themes - Shift+? — hear the available shortcuts read aloud Tab navigation in options follows the standard WAI-ARIA pattern: Tab into the tab list, Left/Right to switch between General, Sound Events, Themes, and Logging. Accessibility is a hard requirement, not a nice-to-have. Finch targets WCAG AA with WCAG AAA contrast ratios. The popup and options page use accessible React primitives (Radix UI), live-region announcements for state changes, and explicit accessible names on every interactive control. All destructive actions (reset, clear logs) require a two-step confirmation. Finch is released under the GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 (AGPL-3.0). Source code, documentation, and releases are on [GitHub](https://github.com/akash07k/finch). Issue reports, theme contributions, and pull requests are welcome.
UI Sounds
Play sounds for important events in the browser, such as a page loading or a new tab being created. If you'd like the browser to audibly notify you when things happen, then this extension is for you. Includes options to enable or disable individual sounds and change individual sound volume. Special thanks to Andre Louis, who created the sounds for this project. https://youtube.com/TheOnjLouis/ If you like this extension and want to support its continued development, then please consider making a small donation: https://paypal.me/luceusproductions
SAS Graphics Accelerator
Enables users with visual impairments or blindness to create, explore, and share data visualizations. SAS Graphics Accelerator enables users with visual impairments or blindness to create, explore, and share data visualizations. It supports alternative presentations of data visualizations that include enhanced visual rendering, text descriptions, tabular data, and interactive sonification. Sonification uses non-speech audio to convey important information about the graph. See the SAS Graphics Accelerator product page at http://support.sas.com/software/products/graphics-accelerator/ for sample graphs, documentation, and more. Feedback Your feedback will help shape the next release of SAS Graphics Accelerator. Please send questions or comments to accessibility@sas.com. Permissions SAS Graphics Accelerator requires the following browser permissions: * The "Read your browsing history" permission is required for users to access accessible alternative presentations of graphs and tables within inline frames, also known as "iframes", within web pages and web apps. * The "Manage your downloads" permission is required for users to quickly access accessible graphs and other files that are saved to the Downloads folder. License Agreement Your use of this product indicates your acceptance of the terms of the SAS Institute Inc. License Agreement for SAS Graphics Accelerator, available here: http://support.sas.com/legaldocs/Graphics_Accelerator_Chrome.pdf. If you do not agree with these terms, you are not authorized to use the product.