Communication access for
every place people live.
Town halls. Libraries. Hospitals. Schools. Restaurants. Retail. Entertainment venues. Wherever the public is served, people living with voice impairment deserve to be heard. We finish what the ADA started — one place at a time.
Restaurants
A stroke survivor pointing at a menu. An AAC user ordering through a tablet. A person with aphasia who needs another second to find the word. Restaurants are where communication access shows up at every table — and where ADA Title III applies.
- Menu pulled directly from POS
- Symbol-to-speech ordering for nonspeaking guests
- Patience-by-default flow for aphasia and apraxia
- Orders flow back to kitchen POS
Retail Stores
Customers living with voice impairment shop, browse, and buy alongside everyone else. Stroke survivors. AAC users. Autistic customers who don't speak the way the world expects. ADA Title III applies — and effective communication should too.
- Symbol-to-speech checkout for nonspeaking customers
- Patience-by-default flow for aphasia and apraxia
- Staff prompts for AAC and assistive device users
- Returns and exchanges that work without spoken language
Healthcare Providers
A stroke survivor at the front desk. Someone with ALS at intake. A nonspeaking autistic teenager at the pediatrician. People living with voice impairment access healthcare every single day — and the right to effective communication isn't optional. ADA Title II / Title III aligned.
- Symbol-to-speech intake for nonspeaking patients
- Communication boards for aphasia and apraxia
- HIPAA-compatible workflows
- Informed-consent flows for AAC users
Government & Public Services
Town halls, libraries, DMVs, and courthouses serve every resident — including the ones who can't speak the way the world expects. Stroke survivors after a hospital discharge. AAC users renewing a license. Aphasia survivors paying a tax bill. ADA Title II covers them. So do we.
- Symbol-to-speech access at every service counter
- AAC-friendly intake for residents who don't speak typically
- Public hearing captioning and access
- Accessible document and form generation
Entertainment & Recreation
Movie theaters, concert venues, sports arenas, and amusement parks are where families spend their time off — including families with members living with voice impairment. Late-stage dementia. Brain injury. AAC users. People with ALS. Effective communication at the ticket counter, the kiosk, the help desk: that's where access lives.
- Symbol-to-speech ordering at concessions and ticketing
- Patience-by-default flow for aphasia, apraxia, and selective mutism
- Accessible ticketing kiosks
- Assistive communication for nonspeaking guests
If your door is open
to the public, this belongs there.
Schools. Hotels. Banks. Fitness centers. Houses of worship. Salons. Anywhere a person living with voice impairment shows up — which is everywhere — communication access belongs at the counter. Tell us where you serve. We'll bring this to your door.