Sally Harrison is developmentally disabled, but on Facebook the 35-year-old woman is just like anyone else.

Victor Tsaran scours the web at lightning speeds and loves his touch-screen iPhone in seeming contradiction to the fact that he is blind.

Internet gadgets and software are creating a virtual world of equality and opportunity for a large segment of the population once marginalised due to physical or mental impairments.

“It is not about being able to do everything; it is about being able to do what you possibly can given your condition and the technology available,” said Mr Tsaran, a project manager at Yahoo! “accessibility lab”.

For Ms Harrison, Facebook was part of transition that took her from highly-supervised confines of a group home to getting a job and moving into her own apartment.

“She started to blossom after that,” said Lisa Giraldi, executive director of Pacific Diversified Services, an organisation devoted to “true community inclusion for adults with developmental disabilities”.

“For Sally, it has been fantastic.”

Facebook privacy controls were set tightly and Ms Harrison’s family signed on as “friends” and watch over her at the online social networking service.

Ms Harrison said that she has 83 Facebook friends and tries to check her online profile daily.

“It has helped me a lot,” said Ms Harrison, who grappled with low self-esteem when she was first taken on as a client by PDS.

“It is important to me because I get to connect with friends I haven’t seen in a long time.”

PDS believes in people with disabilities living as independently as possible in communities, and internet services such as Facebook, e-mail, and online chat help clients stay connected.

“They communicate with each other on Facebook, which is really neat,” Ms Giraldi said. “Then, they can make friends with other people’s friends the way the rest of us do... it’s a social equalizer in a way.”

Facebook pictures, comments and other posts capturing people with disabilities out enjoying their lives can help dispel stereotypes.

“Social networks shield you from the initial first impression people get of a person with a disability,” Mr Tsaran said.

“With social networking, you can create a shield around you so people don’t judge you first by your disability. That is a big one for me.”

Teaching clients basic computer skills such as downloading digital pictures or buying songs for iPods at Apple’s online store iTunes has become standard at PDS.

“It really adds to their sense of acceptance in the community,” Ms Giraldi said.

“It makes them feel a level of independence that really makes them feel good. Twitter will probably be the next thing.”

Ms Tsaran’s team at Yahoo! is devoted to getting engineers and designers to remove barriers that people with disabilities might face when visiting any of the California internet firm’s websites.

Yahoo! has a second accessibility lab in India.

Approximately 60 million people in the US have disabilities and their combined annual income tops a trillion dollars, making them valuable customers. The number of people living with disabilities worldwide is 650 million, according to statistics released recently by the White House.

Technology on display in the lab included Web pages with coding in pictures so descriptions of what might be seen on monitors was spoken aloud by “screen reader” programs used by the blind.

Software let people with varying degrees of paralysis control computers with a tap of a finger, a puff of air, the turn of a head or the clench of a jaw.

Apple has made a priority of building “universal access” into its devices, according to Mr Brightman, who worked for 14 years at the California firm that makes iPods, iPads, iPhones and Macintosh computers.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.