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JARED: Iamp;#39;m Jared Smith. Iamp;#39;m from WebAIM, which is the Web Accessibility and Mind project. Weamp;#39;re a non-profit accessibility consultancy, based at the Institute for Disability Research, Policy, and Practice at Utah State University. And we do web accessibility. We help people make their content more accessible to people with disabilities. I encourage you to check out our website at WebAIM.org. Thereamp;#39;s just a wealth of information and resources available there. So letamp;#39;s dive into this a bit. First of all, I wouldnamp;#39;t consider myself a typography expert. Iamp;#39;m not like a type designer. If youamp;#39;re looking for, like, a list of fonts that youamp;#39;re gonna use, that are accessible, youamp;#39;re not gonna get that in this presentation. My interests are really the intersection of cognition and accessibility and human experience. I do have to disclaim a little bit here. That many of the examples Iamp;#39;m gonna show today are pur