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An independent accessibility lab

Building independence through technology.

I'm Vahid Rajabloo. I build accessible software, assistive hardware, and AI-powered tools for people with disabilities — from real lived experience.

Vahid Rajabloo, an accessibility technology builder, seated in his power wheelchair with a phone mounted in front of him, in a bright, plant-filled room.
Now building
5 assistive tools — many free & open
  • TEDx SpeakerOn disability & life
  • JCI TOYP 2020Honoree, Iran
  • FounderTavanito
  • Free toolsMany open source

The mission

Many people with disabilities don't need pity. They need better tools — that respect their body, their time, and their independence.

I build technology from real needs, then share it with others who face the same barriers.

Featured projects

View all projects
Accessibility

Cursor for Disabled

An adaptive pointing system that lets people with limited motor control move a cursor accurately using whatever input they have.

Limited hand & motor control
View project
AI

Tavanito

An assistive AI companion that helps people with disabilities handle everyday digital tasks through plain conversation.

Screen-reader & cognitive support
View project
Gaming

Accessible Game Controller

An open hardware and firmware project for a fully customizable game controller that adapts to any body.

Disabled gamers
View project

Why support matters

Support keeps these tools free or affordable for the people who need them.

It funds development, prototypes, servers, testing devices, research, and open-source work — not overhead.

  • Development
  • Prototypes
  • Servers
  • Test devices
  • Research
  • Open source

Latest from the build log

All updates
4 min read

Why accessibility should be built from lived experience

Accessibility built as a checklist produces tools that pass audits and still fail people. The alternative starts somewhere harder and more honest: lived experience.

  • accessibility
  • design
  • lived experience
4 min read

Building Cursor for Disabled

Notes from building an adaptive cursor system — why the mouse is a hidden gatekeeper, and what it takes to make precise pointing a solved problem for any body.

  • projects
  • assistive software
  • computer vision
4 min read

AI tools for independence

AI could be the most significant accessibility technology in a generation — or another layer of exclusion. The difference is whether we design it for control, clarity, and reversibility.

  • ai
  • accessibility
  • independence

Support practical accessibility technology.

Help keep useful tools in the hands of people who need them — and fund the next ones.