Auto Check

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Thursday, 28 February 2013

Making the cloud more accessible with Chrome and Android

Posted on 15:23 by Unknown
If you’re a blind or low-vision user, you know that working in the cloud poses unique challenges. Our accessibility team had an opportunity to address some of those challenges at the 28th annual CSUN International Technology and Persons with Disabilities Conference this week. While there, we led a workshop on how we’ve been improving the accessibility of Google technologies. For all those who weren’t at the conference, we want to share just a few of those improvements and updates:

Chrome and Google Apps
  • Chrome OS now supports a high-quality text-to-speech voice (starting with U.S. English). We’ve also made spoken feedback, along with screen magnification and high-contrast mode available out-of-the-box to make Chromebook and Chromebox setup easier for users with accessibility needs.
  • Gmail now has a consistent navigation interface, backed by HTML5 ARIA, which enables blind and low-vision users to effectively navigate using a set of keyboard commands.
  • It’s now much easier to access content in your Google Drive using a keyboard—for example, you can navigate a list of files with just the arrow keys. In Docs, you can access features using the keyboard, with a new way to search menu and toolbar options. New keyboard shortcuts and verbalization improvements also make it easier to use Docs, Sheets and Slides with a screenreader.
  • The latest stable version of Chrome, released last week, includes support for the Web Speech API, which developers can use to integrate speech recognition capabilities into their apps. At CSUN, our friends from Bookshare demonstrated how they use this new functionality to deliver ReadNow—a fully integrated ebook reader for users with print disabilities.
  • Finally, we released a new Help Center Guide specifically for blind and low-vision users to ease the transition to using Google Apps.

Android
  • We added Braille support to Android 4.1; since then, Braille support has been expanded on Google Drive for Android, making it easier to read and edit your documents. You can also use Talkback with Docs and Sheets to edit on the go.
  • With Gesture Mode in Android 4.1, you can reliably navigate the UI using touch and swipe gestures in combination with speech output.
  • Screen magnification is now built into Android 4.2—just enable “Magnification gestures,” then triple tap to enter full screen magnification.
  • The latest release of TalkBack (available on Play soon) includes several highly-requested features like structured browsing of web content and the ability to easily suspend/resume TalkBack via an easy-to-use radial menu.

These updates to Chrome, Google Apps, and Android will help create a better overall experience for our blind and low-vision users, but there’s still room for improvement. Looking ahead, we’re focused on the use of accessibility APIs that will make it easier for third-party developers to create accessible web applications, as well as pushing the state of the art forward with technologies like speech recognition and text-to-speech. We’re looking forward to working with the rest of the industry to make computers and the web more accessible for everyone.

Posted by T.V. Raman, Engineering Lead, Google Accessibility
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in accessibility, Android, apps, chrome + chrome os | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • A look inside our 2011 diversity report
    We work hard to ensure that our commitment to diversity is built into everything we do—from hiring our employees and building our company cu...
  • Accelerating diversity in entrepreneurship with NewME
    For the last three months, the NewMe Accelerator class of spring 2012 has been fully immersed in the entrepreneurial process. The NewMe “fo...
  • Hulu Plus now works with Chromecast
    Hulu has added Chromecast support to their Hulu Plus app—just in time for the fall television season. Now you can easily enjoy your favori...
  • Explore the Galapagos’ biodiversity with Street View
    This week marks the 178th anniversary of Darwin’s first exploration of the Galapagos Islands. This volcanic archipelago is one of the most b...
  • Update from the CEO
    Sergey and I first heard about Android back in 2004, when Andy Rubin came to visit us at Google. He believed that aligning standards around ...
  • Marking the fall of the Iron Curtain
    There are certain events in history that are momentous enough to make you remember where you were at the time. This Friday is the 23rd anniv...
  • Google Maps now has schedules for more than one million public transit stops worldwide
    Since 2005 , we’ve collaborated with hundreds of transit authorities around the world to make a comprehensive resource for millions of rider...
  • New free expression tools from Google Ideas
    As long as people have expressed ideas, others have tried to silence them. Today one out of every three people lives in a society that is s...
  • The tree versus the shadow
    Character is like a tree and reputation like its shadow. The shadow is what we think of it; the tree is the real thing. —Abraham Lincoln Whe...
  • Celebrating teachers on National Teacher Day
    One of the best parts of my job working on the Google Education team has been hearing inspiring stories time and again of great teachers who...

Categories

  • accessibility
  • acquisition
  • ads
  • Africa
  • Android
  • apps
  • Asia
  • books + book search
  • chrome
  • chrome + chrome os
  • commerce
  • computing history
  • crisis response
  • Cultural Institute
  • culture
  • developers
  • display advertising
  • diversity
  • doodles
  • education
  • education and research
  • energy
  • enterprise
  • entrepreneurs at Google
  • entrepreneurship
  • Europe
  • events
  • faster web
  • free expression
  • g2g
  • giving
  • Google Apps highlights
  • google ideas
  • google play
  • google.org
  • google+
  • googleplus
  • googlers and culture
  • government transparency
  • green
  • innovation
  • ipv6
  • journalism and news
  • Latin America
  • local
  • maps and earth
  • mobile
  • online safety
  • open source
  • personalization
  • photos
  • policy and issues
  • politics
  • privacy
  • privacy and security
  • publishers
  • scholarships
  • search
  • search stories
  • search trends
  • security
  • security and safety tips
  • small business
  • transparency
  • youtube and video

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (190)
    • ►  December (11)
    • ►  November (13)
    • ►  October (15)
    • ►  September (12)
    • ►  August (10)
    • ►  July (13)
    • ►  June (28)
    • ►  May (16)
    • ►  April (21)
    • ►  March (18)
    • ▼  February (19)
      • Making the cloud more accessible with Chrome and A...
      • Support free expression: Vote for the Netizen of t...
      • Race to win on big and small screens with Chrome S...
      • From top dresses to last-minute surprises, Google ...
      • Our first-ever Google Journalism Fellowship winners
      • The Chromebook Pixel, for what’s next
      • Doodle 4 Google: A stately competition
      • Oscar fans: we’ve got you covered
      • Fireside Hangouts: Join First Lady Michelle Obama ...
      • An update on our war against account hijackers
      • RISE Awards 2013: A global effort
      • Fireside Hangouts: Join President Obama on Google+...
      • Solve for X: Celebrating moonshot thinking—join us...
      • Zagat: Who’s serving up the best service?
      • A Chrome Experiment made with some friends from Oz
      • Safer Internet Day: How we help you stay secure on...
      • Google and Brazil celebrate Carnival 2013
      • M&M’s, Beyonce and Ravens dominate game day search...
      • Google creates €60m Digital Publishing Innovation ...
    • ►  January (14)
  • ►  2012 (269)
    • ►  December (25)
    • ►  November (20)
    • ►  October (18)
    • ►  September (16)
    • ►  August (19)
    • ►  July (20)
    • ►  June (28)
    • ►  May (30)
    • ►  April (19)
    • ►  March (27)
    • ►  February (23)
    • ►  January (24)
  • ►  2011 (41)
    • ►  December (33)
    • ►  November (8)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile