This year marks four decades since Apple founded its first accessibility office,Singapore an initiative to build more adaptable computers that would launch decades of device and operating system tools, including Assistive Access and Personal Voice. As Global Accessibility Awareness Day (May 15) approaches, Apple is leaning into this legacy.
Previewing a slew of new features set to be released throughout this year, the company explained it was ushering in a "new level of accessibility across the Apple ecosystem," utilizing on-device machine learning and artificial intelligence. This includes brand new App Store, Mac, and Apple Vision Pro updates, accessible device modes, and inter-device compatibility.
SEE ALSO: Apple is working on a feature that will make connecting to hotel Wi-Fi easier“At Apple, accessibility is part of our DNA,” said Apple CEO Tim Cook. “Making technology for everyone is a priority for all of us, and we’re proud of the innovations we’re sharing this year."
Debuting on the App Store worldwide, and to Apple product listings later this year, the company announced a brand new accessibility tagging system that hopes to make it easier for Apple users with disabilities to find apps and products that fit their needs.
Scroll down on apps and games in the Apple store to find the new Accessibility Nutrition Label, which includes in-depth accessibility information like features and compatibility, as well as external links to developer information (the labels don't have anything to do with nutrition, they're just modeled on the iconic design of food packaging labels).
For now, developers will be limited to nine marketplace labels, including VoiceOver, Voice Control, Larger Text, Sufficient Contrast, Reduced Motion, Captions, and Audio Description. Apple's announcement coincides with wider tagging efforts, including those in the gaming industry, and required nutrition labels for internet service providers.
Apple will finally add its flagship Magnifier tool to Mac, enabling users to activate Magnifier on a connected camera, including iPhones, and view the feed on their computers. Users can then adjust brightness, contrast, color filters, and perspective to make text and images easier to see, live capture views through the camera, and use document view on saved text.
Apple Vision Pro will get expanded vision accessibility features via a new visionOS update later this year, too. A more controllable Zoom tool will let users zero in on specific areas of their field of vision, such as a recipe in a cookbook, while keeping the rest of the view the same.
Individuals can also use Live Recognition on Apple Vision Pro to have their surroundings described to them, find objects, and read documents using on-device machine learning. A new main camera API will also open up access to developers of person-to-person assistance apps, such as Be My Eyes — Meta added a similar integration to its Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses last year.
Apple is launching a new feature they're calling Braille Access, which turns iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Apple Vision Pro devices into a full-featured braille note taker, the company explains. Using Braille Access, users can launch apps, take notes in braille format, and perform calculations using Nemeth Braille (used for math and science equations). Braille Ready Format (BRF) files can be opened directly in Braille Access, and, paired with Live Caption, the devices can translate live speech directly into Braille.
Accessible Reader takes Apple's text personalization and applies it systemwide, meaning individuals can customize any text in any app to their preferred reading set-up, like a different font, color, spacing, or Spoken Content tools. The mode is also available in Magnifier, so users can take real-world text, convert and customize it.
Apple Watch users will be able to use Live Captions in tandem with Live Listen, a feature that amplifies external sounds and turns your device into a remote microphone. By connecting their iPhone or other listening device to their Apple Watch, users can follow along to Live Captions synced with a device across the room, for example.
Apple will be revamping its motion-related accessibility tools this year too, including faster eye and head tracking for typing and motion sickness reduction for Mac.
Apple also plans to release expanded language options for AI-powered Live Captions, a new assistive access viewing mode for Apple TV watchers, and a new settings option that lets users share their personalized accessibility selections with other devices in an instant.
Topics Apple Apps & Software Social Good Accessibility
Previous:Tokens of Appreciation
Next:Two Poems
FSU vs. UNC basketball livestream: Game time, streaming dealsBest Dyson deal: Snag the Dyson OmniHello, World! Part Five: Two Squares by Sheila HetiGoogle announced a 5Unconditional Death Is a Good Title by Bernadette Mayer26 lawmakers defend Energy Department scientists against TrumpHow to watch Michigan vs. Iowa basketball livestreams: Game time, streaming deals, and moreWhy Tights and No Knickers? by Sophie HaigneyWhat the Paris Review Staff Read in 2022 by The Paris ReviewiOS 17.4 beta adds 118 new emoji. The phoenix one is fire.Encounters with Ghosts by Sadie SteinMicrosoft Gaming lays off 1,900 — and the internet is mad at Xbox head Phil SpencerSpaceX reveals cause of September explosionFrom Our Summer 1976 Issue: A List of Remarkably Silly NamesMac 40th anniversary: Here’s every single Mac from ’84 to nowStaff Picks: Scary Stories by The Paris ReviewWhy are people watching therapy and therapist porn?On Mel Bochner and Sophie Calle by The Paris ReviewMicrosoft Gaming lays off 1,900 — and the internet is mad at Xbox head Phil SpencerFind My Friends by Sophie Haigney How to encrypt your computer (and why you should) MashReads Podcast: Can Joe Hill's horror books stand out from his father's works? Wikipedia pages briefly vandalized with swastikas Celebrities at the Grammys will wear white roses in support of Time's Up Laura Dern confirms this dog looks a lot like Laura Dern Apple postpones return to office until 2022 Laverne Cox makes history as the first trans woman on the cover of Cosmo Now is a great time to catch up with 'Warrior' on HBO Max Betty Boo the salon cat has an important job Tesla's Cybertruck made a cameo at AI Day. Kind of. How to help Afghan refugees trying to escape Taliban rule Serena Williams subtly burns controversial player Tennys Sandgren How to watch the Paralympics, even without cable Facebook, Google, Uber lobbying arm is hiring a director of diversity Dylan Farrow expertly calls out Justin Timberlake's hypocrisy by using his own tweet Clueless people are posting their searches to a fake Google Facebook page, and it's too much Elon Musk reveals plans to unleash a humanoid Tesla Bot Democrats, it's time to fight like Superman for truth, justice, and the American way Google's Pixel 6 to ship without a charger Netflix's 'Sweet Girl' review: A bonkers, Jason Momoa
2.7655s , 10156.0078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Singapore】,Evergreen Information Network