In this approximately 30-minute podcast, I demonstrate the use of the VizWiz remote-assistance iOS app to successfully identify items in the kitchen. This podcast is meant as a preliminary effort to demonstrate practical real-world VizWiz applications for blind and visually-impaired people. Please stay tuned for additional coverage of this amazing free app.
Archive for the ‘iPhone’ Category
VizWiz: A Wizard to Help in the Kitchen
Tuesday, May 31st, 2011SoundHound Asked to Roll Back Accessibility Declines and Open the App’s Ears to Blind VoiceOver Users
Tuesday, May 17th, 2011This is a collaboration effort between No Eyes Needed and Blind Access Journal, two leaders in blindness advocacy and the mobilization of efforts to improve accessibility in mainstream products, services and resources. Our goal today is to share insight on the current state of accessibility within the popular iOS music identification app, Soundhound. We will give you a brief rundown of Soundhound’s history pertaining to access with Apple’s built-in, screen reading solution, Voiceover, as well as a short audio walkthrough of the application’s interface and inaccessible components from a blindness perspective. The application was once a tremendously beneficial resource with nearly 100% accessibility for Voiceover users. It is our hope with this article and audio demonstration that we can illustrate the decline in access and some areas that the Soundhound development and engineering teams can address as soon as possible. (more…)
Fixing the Broken Table Index on iOS Using the Rotor
Wednesday, May 4th, 2011Have you suddenly discovered you can no longer use the “table index” feature of your iDevice to navigate large lists like contacts and music alphabetically? The rotor gesture may be the culprit. Follow these written steps or listen to the podcast to learn how you can easily fix this issue.
Open the Contacts App
If you have not customized your iDevice by moving your apps into folders, follow the steps below to locate and start the Contacts app. If you customized the Home screen, locate and start Contacts in the folder it has been assigned.
- Press the Home button to make sure you are on the Home screen.
- Flick to the right until you find “Page 1 of 2″ or a similar icon and double tap to move to the second page of apps.
- Flick to the right until you find Contacts and double tap.
Locating and Testing the Table Index
- Make sure you are in the list of contacts by flicking to the right a few times. If not, find and double tap the Back button in the upper left-hand corner of the screen just below the status bar.
- Place a finger on the right edge of the screen about halfway down. VoiceOver should say “table index.”
- Flick down a few times. If you hear the letters of the alphabet in ascending order, the table index is working correctly. If not, you will hear the words “table index” spelled as you flick down.
Using the Rotor Gesture
If the table index feature is not working, it is very likely the rotor gesture was accidentally used to change its behavior. Follow these steps to set the rotor to “adjust value,” which will fix the table index. Please note these steps are just one of several possible ways to learn and use the rotor gesture. Please email me if you continue experiencing difficulties performing this gesture correctly.
- Place your middle and index fingers on the screen.
- Move upward and to the right with your middle finger while your index finger moves down and to the left. This is known as a dial movement, which will adjust the rotor clockwise one position.
- Repeat the rotor gesture as you move through “words”, “lines,” “language,” etc. Stop when you reach the “adjust value” setting.
Test the table index feature in several apps. You should find it allows you to move alphabetically through your list of contacts, artists and song titles in your music library and in a number of other situations where you have large lists.
As always, your feedback is appreciated so I may improve the content and quality of my work. Please contact me using the previously given email address.
CSUN: Zoom In and Read on the iPhone
Friday, March 25th, 2011Derek Bove from AI Squared described and demonstrated the company’s new ZoomReader app that can use the camera in the iPhone or iPod Touch 4 to magnify and read text using optical character recognition. While some totally-blind people with excellent camera skills may find this $20 app useful, it is marketed to those who have partial sight.
Phoenix-Area Blind iPad, iPhone and iPod Touch Users Asked to Fill the Room at Upcoming iOS Developer Group Meeting
Saturday, January 29th, 2011The Phoenix iOS Developer Group (PI) will be holding its February meeting on the topic of accessibility. Justin Mann, a blind iPhone user, will be presenting on the use of Apple’s built-in VoiceOver screen reader with several innovative iOS apps that enable business productivity, social-media participation, identification of items in the surrounding environment and much more.
Anybody is welcome to attend. This is an excelent opportunity to show some app developers that accessibility matters and that blind people are using iOS devices in number. Let’s fill the room with as many Phoenix-area blind people and their talking iPads, iPhones and iPod Touches as we possibly can!
The meeting will be held at the University of Advancing Technology located at 2625 West Baseline Road, Tempe, Ariz., from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Wednesday, Feb. 2.
We look forward to seeing all of you there.
Color Sense with the iPhone: Karen’s Sweaters
Friday, January 21st, 2011Karen and I use two iPhone apps to identify the color of three of her cardigan sweaters, one of which she plans to wear at our friend’s memorial service. We find that the two iPhone apps, AidColors and oMoby, help us, but do not provide us all the information we want.
Download, Play or Pause – Color Sense with the iPhone: Karen’s Sweaters
Exploring the iPod Touch and Learning Braille Using the Refreshabraille 18 Display
Thursday, January 6th, 2011Tyler Juranek demonstrates the iPod Touch with VoiceOver and the Refreshabraille 18 display.
Tyler covers a number of topics in this approximately 30-minute podcast, including:
- A physical description of the Refreshabraille 18 with commentary and a demonstration of its durability.
- A thorough demonstration of the process for pairing the Refreshabraille with the iPod Touch using Bluetooth.
- Remote control and navigation of the iPod Touch using the controls on the Refreshabraille from a distance.
- Contracted Braille keyboard text entry.
- Using VoiceOver Practice Mode to demonstrate a possibly easy means for teaching and learning Braille.
I am honored to welcome Tyler to the Blind Access Journal podcast for his excellent debut. We are looking forward to many more contributions.
iPhone App Maker Justifies Charging Blind Customers Extra for VoiceOver Accessibility
Thursday, December 23rd, 2010A recent version 2.0 update to Awareness!, an iOS app that enables the user of an iPad, iPhone or iPod Touch to hear important sounds in their environment while listening through headphones, features six available in-app purchases, including one that enables VoiceOver accessibility for the company’s blind customers.
Awareness! The Headphone App, authored by small developer Essency, costs 99 cents in the iTunes Store. VoiceOver support for the app costs blind customers over five times its original price at $4.99.
Essency co-founder Alex Georgiou said the extra cost comes from the added expense and development time required to make Awareness! Accessible with Apple’s built-in VoiceOver screen reader.
“Awareness! is a pretty unusual App. Version 1.x used a custom interface that did not lend itself very well for VoiceOver,” he said. “Our developers tried relabeling all the controls and applied the VoiceOver tags as per spec but this didn’t improve things much. There were so many taps and swipe gestures involved in changing just one setting that it really was unusable.”
Essency’s developers tackled the accessibility challenge by means of a technique the blind community knows all too well with websites like Amazon and Safeway that offer a separate, incomplete accessibility experience requiring companies to spend additional funds on specialized, unwanted customer-service training and technical maintenance tasks.
“The solution was to create a VoiceOver-specific interface, however, this created another headache for our developers,” Georgiou said. “It meant having the equivalent of a dual interface: one interface with the custom controllers and the other optimized for VoiceOver. It was almost like merging another version of Awareness! in the existing app.”
As an example of the need for a dual-interface approach and a challenge to the stated simplicity of making iOS apps accessible, Georgiou described a portion of the app’s user interface the developers struggled to make accessible with VoiceOver:
“Awareness! features an arched scale marked in percentages in the centre of a landscape screen with a needle that pivots from left to right in correspondence to sound picked up by either the built in mic or inline headphones. You change the mic threshold by moving your finger over the arched scale which uses a red filling to let you know where it’s set. At the same time, a numerical display appears telling you the dBA value of the setting. When the needle hits the red, the mic is switched on and routed to your headphones. To the right you have the mic volume slider, turn the mic volume up or down by sliding your finger over it. Then you have a series of buttons placed around the edges that control things like the vibrate alarm, autoset, mic trigger and the settings page access.”
Georgiou said maintaining two separate user interfaces, one for blind customers and another for sighted, comes at a high price.
“At the predicted uptake of VoiceOver users, we do not expect to break even on the VoiceOver interface for at least 12 to 18 months unless something spectacular happens with sales,” he said. “We would have loved to have made this option free, unfortunately the VoiceOver upgrade required a pretty major investment, representing around 60% of the budget for V2 which could have been used to further refine Awareness and introduce new features aimed at a mass market.”
Georgiou said this dual-interface scheme will continue to represent a significant burden to Essency’s bottom line in spite of the added charge to blind customers.
“Our forecasts show that at best we could expect perhaps an extra 1 or 2 thousand VoiceOver users over the next 12 to 18 months,” he said. “At the current pricing this would barely cover the costs for the VoiceOver interface development.”
Georgiou said payment of the $4.99 accessibility charge does not make the app fully accessible at this time.
“It is our intention that the VoiceOver interface will continue to be developed with new features such as AutoPause and AutoSet Plus being added on for free,” he said. “Lack of time did not allow these features to be included in this update.”
Georgiou said the decision to make Awareness! Accessible had nothing to do with business.
“From a business perspective it really didn’t make sense for us to invest in a VoiceOver version but we decided to go ahead with the VoiceOver version despite the extra costs because we really want to support the blind and visually impaired,” he said. “It was a decision based on heartfelt emotion, not business.”
Georgiou said accessibility should be about gratitude and he would even consider it acceptable for a company to charge his daughter four to five times as much for something she needed if she were to have a disability.
“Honestly, I would be grateful and want to encourage as many parties as possible to consider accessibility in apps and in fact in all areas of life,” he said. “I would not object to any developer charging their expense for adding functionality that allowed my daughter to use an app that improved her life in any way. In this case, better to have than not.”
Georgiou said he wants to make it clear he and his company do not intend to exploit or harm blind people.
“I first came into contact with a blind couple when I was 10 years old through a Christian Sunday school (over 38 years ago),” he said. “They were the kindest couple I ever met and remember being amazed at the things they managed to do without sight. I remember them fondly. I could not imagine myself or my partner doing anything to hurt the blind community.”
A common thread in many of Georgiou’s statements seems to ask how a small company strikes a balance between doing the right thing and running a financially sustainable business that supports their families.
“I don’t think you understand, we’re a tiny company. We’re not a corporate,” he said. “The founders are just two guys who have families with kids, I’ve got seven!”
Georgiou said he understands how accessibility is a human right that ought to be encouraged and protected.
“I recognize that there is a problem here that can be applied to the world in general and it’s important to set an acceptable precedent,” he said. “I think I’ve already made my opinions clear in that I believe civilized society should allow no discrimination whatsoever.”
In spite of accessibility as a human right in the civilized world, Georgiou said he believes this consideration must be balanced with other practical business needs.
“When it comes to private companies, innovation, medicine, technology, etc., It’s ultra-important all are both encouraged and incentivized to use their talents to improve quality of life in all areas,” Georgiou said. “The question is who pays for it? The affected community? The government? The companies involved?”
Standing Foursquare for Accessibility
Wednesday, November 17th, 2010In this approximately 30-minute podcast, I demonstrate the foursquare iPhone app and describe opportunities for improving its accessibility to blind users who rely on Apple’s built-in VoiceOver screen reader.
Advocates have started a topic on foursquare’s Get Satisfaction community forum and blind foursquare users are asked to post comments about their experiences with the app and to describe how they would like to see its accessibility improved.
I have also created this demonstration for the benefit of those at foursquare with whom a number of us are in discussions about opportunities for enhancing its accessibility.
Download, Play or Pause – Standing Foursquare for Accessibility
AT&T Describes How to Fix iPhones in Arizona Whose Time Fell Back by One Hour on Nov. 7
Sunday, November 7th, 2010While Arizona did not observe the Sunday end of Daylight Saving Time, some iPhones in the state configured with default settings did, falling back an hour along with those in the Pacific time zone.
April, an AT&T customer service representative, reported that the issue involves the configuration of time zone support in the iPhone’s Mail, Contacts and Calendars settings. By default, time zone support is on and set to Cupertino.
April provided the following instructions for disabling time zone support, so that this information can be obtained from AT&T’s network:
These steps will work for sighted users who are not running the VoiceOver screen reader for the blind. Instructions for blind users follow.
- Tap Settings on the Home screen.
- Tap Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
- Tap Time Zone Support.
- Tap the button to turn Time Zone Support off.
If you are a blind iPhone user who relies on Apple’s built-in VoiceOver screen reader, follow these steps to turn off time zone support:
- Press the Home button to move to the Home screen.
- Flick left or right to locate the Settings icon. This will be found on the first page of most iPhones.
- Double tap Settings.
- Flick right several times to locate Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
- Double tap Mail, Contacts, Calendars.
- Flick right until you locate “Time Zone Support, On.”
- Double tap “Time Zone Support, On.” You are now in the time zone support window.
- Flick to the right a couple of times to find a button labeled “Time Zone Support, On.”
- Double tap the button to turn this feature off. The iPhone will now pull all its time zone information from the cellular network.
Once the time zone support setting has been deactivated, close the settings screen by pressing the Home button and test the time change by following these steps:
- Press and hold down the Sleep button on the top of the iPhone for two seconds.
- Double tap the Power Off button. Single tap the button if you are not using VoiceOver. The iPhone will announce it is shutting down.
- Wait 5 or 10 seconds.
- Hold down the Sleep button for two or three seconds to start the iPhone.
- Allow 10 to 15 seconds for the iPhone to fully power up. If you use VoiceOver, its active status will be announced.
- The iPhone starts in a locked state, with the current time shown. Flick to the left a couple of times to hear it announced. Flick to the right twice and double tap to unlock the iPhone and go on your merry way.
As always, comments, corrections and all constructive feedback is useful.