On the occasion of Global Accessibility Awareness Day, Google is making a showcasing several new accessibility features integrated into its software as well as improvements to those that were already present in Android. The first is a major update to Android’s Lookout app, which provides additional information about the environment for those who are blind or have impaired vision.
Using artificial intelligence (AI), Google is giving Lookout the capability to search for particular objects, such as seats, restrooms, and other items, creating a total of seven categories.
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Eve Andersson, senior director of product inclusion, equity, and accessibility at Google, said, ‘As you move your camera around the room, Lookout will notify you of the direction and distance to the item.’ penned in the blog entry.
With the Look to Speak software for Android, users may use their eyes to select prewritten, customisable words that their smartphone will then read aloud. With the goal of ‘helping make communicating more accessible with cognitive differences, literacy challenges, and language barriers,’ Andersson says the app is now adding a text-free option.
Through GitHub, developers may access Project Gameface, which lets users manipulate a computer’s cursor with their heads and facial gestures, as it expands from PC to Android.
A few more accessibility initiatives are covered in Google’s blog article. Businesses can now indicate on their Google Maps profile that they support Bluetooth devices with Auracast enabled, so those devices can pick up audio from broadcast devices in cinemas. theaters or fitness centers. Additionally, ‘to Android and iOS globally in all supported languages,’ detailed audio guidance for Google Maps’ walking directions is now available.
Google is making
Based on customer input, the company updated its sound alerts, which can warn of loud noises such as fire alarms. Not so long ago, there were enhancements made to the onboarding procedure, sound event browsing, and custom sound storage.
Witnessing tech businesses continue to advance accessibility is always a source of encouragement. A feature that allows users to navigate around iPhones and iPads using eye tracking was just one of the improvements Apple revealed yesterday will be added to its software later this year.