When an iPhone Becomes Accessibility Technology
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An iPhone can read a menu, identify a bus stop, flash for alerts, or let someone send a private message without standard touch gestures. Riley and Ashley look at the accessibility tools built into iPhone as a practical toolbox rather than a shiny demo: VoiceOver and the problem of badly labeled buttons, captions and vibration patterns for hearing access, and AssistiveTouch, Voice Control, and switch access for motor disabilities. They also keep the real-world limits in view, from hard-to-find settings to the awkwardness of scanning text or using speech commands in public.
Key topics covered:
• Why accessibility features are not a niche category
• VoiceOver, Zoom, contrast, and camera-based reading tools
• Captions, visual alerts, haptics, and hearing device support
• AssistiveTouch, Voice Control, dwell selection, and switches
• Discoverability, dignity, and messy real-life use