Cursor for Disabled
An adaptive pointing system that lets people with limited motor control move a cursor accurately using whatever input they have.
I'm Vahid Rajabloo. I build accessible software, assistive hardware, and AI-powered tools for people with disabilities — from real lived experience.

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
An adaptive pointing system that lets people with limited motor control move a cursor accurately using whatever input they have.
An assistive AI companion that helps people with disabilities handle everyday digital tasks through plain conversation.
An open hardware and firmware project for a fully customizable game controller that adapts to any body.
Why support matters
It funds development, prototypes, servers, testing devices, research, and open-source work — not overhead.
Accessibility built as a checklist produces tools that pass audits and still fail people. The alternative starts somewhere harder and more honest: lived experience.
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.
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.
Help keep useful tools in the hands of people who need them — and fund the next ones.