Google Introduces Voice Access To Make Android More Accommodating For People With Disabilities (zdnet.com) 35
An anonymous reader writes: Google has launched a new beta app called Voice Access, which lets people control their Android phone with voice commands. The company took the wraps off Voice Access as an accessibility tool to help people who have difficulties using the touch interface, such as those with tremors or paralysis. Once installed, items in Settings and apps on the Homepage are numbered. The user can tell the device, "Go Home", which is transcribed at the top of the page, and then say, "Open one", to launch the app numbered one. Twitter and Facebook also recently took some steps to make some of their services more accessible to people.
Star Trek IV (Score:2, Funny)
The disability thing is just a cover. They want to make sure our computers are less annoying to any time travelers from the future.
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Agreed. It will be nice while driving.
"Computer, please open netflxix and play Star Trek IV"
Nope. Not yet, anyway. (Score:2)
Doesn't appear to work that way. Homepage and settings only, numbered items only.
A shame, really. If it worked as you suggest, it would be considerably more useful. To everyone including the handicapped. And an inclusive, comprehensive solution is always a great deal better than an exclusive, restricted solution if both are practical -- as they are in this case.
But it's a start.
I'm from the future? (Score:2)
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"I guess I'm a time traveler"
Cool... Did Samsung ever go back to having microSD expansion in their Galaxy Note phones?
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Your Galaxy devices have had the ability to scroll the screen and push buttons using your voice? Every phone has had voice commands, but a fully voice operated interface I've never seen before.
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but there was no takers.
Dammit, people have no vision these day
Not nice for all people... (Score:2, Funny)
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Just remember this: if there's no mandate for general accessibility, and accessible tools aren't widely available, it'll be a lot harder for you to kill yourself and get out of our way when you get old enough to develop tremors, lose your hearing, or lose your sight.
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I want you to give me an API so I can write my own interface.
I wonder if something like Microsoft's AI Bot API [arstechnica.com] may eventually be able to do the sort of things you're perhaps thinking of. Granted, probably not on a mobile device yet, but I think this idea may have long-term potential for accessibility. Chat programs are becoming almost a platform unto themselves, so if this can leverage some of those capabilities with customized, programmable bots to help perform tasks by voice command, I could see it being quite handy for allowing very deep customization of voice c
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Now if they could just (Score:2)
... add support for audible feedback that did not require one to look at the screen, it would be useful for someone that was either blind, or that could not look at the screen for some other reason (perhaps someone driving?)
And to actually control functions in individual apps where it made sense, as well, such as music apps, maps/navigation, etc.. Some of that would require app developers to add hooks/definitions of the different functions.
"Ok google, open Pandora and select 'classic rock' station"
So many o
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Google has had a screen reader called TalkBack for blind users pretty much forever. I'm not sure how well it works with this new capability though.
Good for the Blind (Score:3)
Not just those apps (Score:2)
Apple makes it really easy to support Guided Access in apps, basically by assigning a meaningful string to every UI element so someone can navigate an entire touch UI just by listening to what is on the screen as you list and move between active control elements.
Not every app is as good as it could be about supporting this, but even doing nothing at all the iPhone uses labels on buttons and text areas to describe what is going on with the UI. So really it's many more apps that are at least usable to the bl
Google doesn't give a shit about visual impairment (Score:2)
Just see this thread. [google.com] People are asking for the font on Google Maps for Android to be scalable. That would go a long way to help people with poor vision to use one of Google's main Android apps.
Legitimate user (Score:2)