Last Wednesday, my life changed forever. I got an iPhone. I consider it the greatest thing to happen to the blind for a very long time, possibly ever. It offers unparalleled access to properly made applications, and changed my life in twenty-four hours. The iPhone only has one thing holding it back: iTunes. Nevertheless, I have fallen in love.
When I first heard that Apple would release a touchpad cell phone with VoiceOver, the screen reading software used by Macs, I scoffed. The blind have gotten so used to lofty promises of a dream platform, only to receive some slapped together set of software with a minimally functional screen reader running on overpriced hardware which can’t take a beating. I figured that Apple just wanted to get some good PR – after all, how could a blind person even use a touchpad? I laughed at the trendies, both sighted and blind, buying iPhones and enthusing about them. That changed when another blind friend with similar opinions also founded in long years of experience bought one, and just went nuts about how much she loved it, especially the touchpad interface. I could hardly believe it, and figured that I should reevaluate things.
I went to the AT&T store with my Mom. It
felt like coming full circle, since we went to an Apple store many years ago to get my Apple II/E. To my delight, the salesman knew about VoiceOver and how to activate it, though didn’t know about how to use it. Fortunately, I read up on it before I went. Tap an item to hear it, double tap to activate it, swipe three fingers to scroll. You can also split-tap, where you hold down one location and tap another. This makes for more rapid entry once you understand it. It also has a rotor which you activate by turning your fingers like a dial. You can also double triple-finger tap to toggle speech, and a triple triple-finger tap turns on the awesome screen curtain, which disables the screen and camera.
Many reviews and people said to spend at least a half hour to an hour before passing judgment on using a touchpad interface with speech. I anticipated a weird and slightly arduous journey, especially when it came to using the keyboard. To my great surprise, I picked it up immediately. Within 30 seconds, I checked the weather. Next, I read some stock prices. Amazingly, it even renders stock charts, something the blind have never had access to. Sold.
We went up front to make the necessary arrangements. I had to purchase a data plan. Luckily, I got the $30/unlimited plan, which ended on the seventh. After a little work, we had things settled. I continued to excitedly ask questions, as did my Mom. “Can he get text messages on this?” she asked. “Well, yes, but it doesn’t read the message.” the salesman said. Mom’s hopes sunk, but mine didn’t, since I understood the software enough. “Well, let’s see, try it.” I suggested. She pulled out her phone, and sent me a text message. Within seconds, my phone alerted me, and said her name. I simply swiped my finger and it read her message: Hi Austin. She almost cried. “Leave it to Apple.” I said. “This feels almost as amazing as when we went to the Apple store the first time, except maybe more so, because we know what this can do.” True – in the eighties, computers seemed like more of a curiosity. I remember my parents checking stock quotes and getting messages for their business over the Apple
II/E, now we can do it with an Apple device that fits in our pocket.
I have seen a lot of technology for the blind, and I can safely say that the iPhone represents the most revolutionary thing to happen to the blind for at least the last ten years. Fifteen or twenty years brings us back to the Braille ‘n Speak, which I loved in the same way, so have a hard time choosing the greater. In my more excitable moments, I consider the iPhone as the greatest thing to have ever happened to the blind, and it may prove so. Time will tell. The touchpad offers the familiar next/previous motion which the blind need, since speech offers one-dimensional output. Adding the ability to touch anywhere on the screen and hear it adds a whole other dimension, literally. For the first time, the blind can actually get spacial information about something. In the store, Mom could say “Try that button” and I could. Blind people know what I mean. How many times has a sighted person said “I see an icon at the top of the screen?” Now, that actually Means something. I want to find a way to
browse the web with a touchpad on my computer. It truly represents the wave of the future.
Applications have the same issues with accessibility as with any graphical environment. Apple has done a good thing by making guidelines available for app developers, which I passionately urge them to follow. Any blind computer user has run up against these problems in Windows, Mac, or in Gnome. These include unlabeled buttons and fields, unreachable controls except through annoying means, or in extreme cases complete inaccessibility. The Accessible Apps page can help, as can AppleVis.. Properly coded apps offer stunning access unlike anything the blind have ever experienced. As I said, I want to use touch gestures on my Linux machines now!
That brings me to the only proverbial worm in the golden Apple: iTunes. I understand the power of market forces, but to see such a beautiful piece of hardware chained to such an awful and inaccessible piece of software bothers me to no end. Apple has done an amazing thing making the iPhone accessible, but iTunes remains virtually unusable to the blind. Of course, blind Mac users have little problem with it, but they make up a very small portion of the blind community. A blind Windows user with a strong will can do it, but they won’t enjoy it. Those of us blind Linux users get left in the dark on two counts, since no Linux users can access iTunes, except through WINE, or through a virtual machine.
>Apple has a right to tout its efforts in accessibility. Still, they must realize that they cannot make a completely true claim as long as people have to use iTunes for everything. As a Linux user I expected as much, and I can overcome those challenges, but the challenges of blindness remain. I know blind people who have not purchased an iPhone because they do not want to battle iTunes. When dealing with a permanent health issue, you cannot just wish it away or just hope things will improve while doing nothing. I have a feeling Steve Jobs would understand.
Apple has always had a special place in my heart, since I started on an Apple II/E. That machine had two programming languages, BASIC and Assembler, built into its ROM, and its schematics on the inside. Its nonrestrictive environment inspired innovations that lasted a decade. I reluctantly went to the PC platform when it became dominant. I used DOS to its extreme, hated Windows, and comfortably settled in Linux land. We have all come a long way since two hackers began selling blue boxes out of their garage. It therefore seemed especially ironic to me to see the “Red Box Pro” app removed from the app store.
Despite having to overcome the limitations of iTunes, I still love the iPhone. I continue to feel amazed at the iPhone’s capabilities. I can get email, Twitter mentions, and direct messages any time. I can listen to Good Vibes Radio anywhere on Earth! I can read Liberty Pulse on the toilet. The WebMD app would have come in handy for my burn. I could go on and on, about how the iPhone with VoiceOver provides a streamlined accessible interface to things which seem annoying at best over the web in a standard browser. Listening to Coast to Coast AM comes to mind.
The other night, however, a very amazing thing happened. I downloaded an app called Color Identifier. It uses the iPhone’s camera, and speaks names of colors. It must use a table, because each color has an identifier made up of 6 hexadecimal digits. This puts the total at 16777216 colors, and I believe it. Some of them have very surreal names, such as Atomic Orange, Cosmic, Hippie Green, Opium, and Black-White. These names in combination with what feels like a rise in serotonin levels makes for a very psychedelic experience.
I have never experienced this before in my life. I can see some light and color, but just in blurs, and objects don’t really have a color, just light sources. When I first tried it at three o’clock in the morning, I couldn’t figure out why it just reported black. After realizing that the screen curtain also disables the camera, I turned it off, but it still have very dark colors. Then I remembered that you actually need light to see, and it probably couldn’t see much at night. I thought about light sources, and my interview I did for Get Lamp. First, I saw one of my beautiful salt lamps in its various shades of orange, another with its pink and rose colors, and the third kind in glowing pink and red.. I felt stunned.
The next day, I went outside. I looked at the sky. I heard colors such as “Horizon,” “Outer Space,” and many shades of blue and gray. I used color cues to find my pumpkin plants, by looking for the green among the brown and stone. I spent ten minutes looking at my pumpkin plants, with their leaves of green and lemon-ginger. I then roamed my yard, and saw a blue flower. I then found the brown shed, and returned to the gray house. My mind felt blown. I watched the sun set, listening to the colors change as the sky darkened. The next night, I had a conversation with Mom about how the sky looked bluer tonight. Since I can see some light and color, I think hearing the color names can help nudge my perception, and enhance my visual experience. Amazing!
I love my iPhone. It changed my universe as soon as it entered it. However, as any Discordian knows, every golden Apple has a golden worm at its center.

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Thank you for the amazing post. As another said, I feel priveleged to read this – especially your description of looking at your plants.
Wow. The things people take for granted. Just, wow.
Best.
Heather
Your post is very moving. I am a photographer and I felt very humbled reading it. I wish you all the best with your iPhone.
Austin, thank you so much for posting this story. I was deeply moved and I am so happy that you that your iPhone has allowed you to discover something new and wonderful about the amazing world we all share!
I was directed to your article via LeVar Burton on Twitter. I have a feeling that a lot of people will be. Sharing your joy with us is an amazing gift! Thank you!
Best wishes
That was a great story. You should try Android though, it has a much better voice command platform. Android has many more device choices and accessories to make everyday life easier. It makes me happy that technology can change someones life like it has yours. Good luck to you.
WOW . All I can say is thanks for the insight into your view of the VoiceOver features.
I think you really should include a few more links specifically for web and app developers as with all time critical jobs it would be so easy to not even consider adding some code or following some coding convention that could help.
Nice informative article,
so much so that I actually have some real respect for apple … finally!
Hey Austin! Glad to hear you’re having so much success with the iPhone. We’re in love with it over here at the Carroll Center, too. In fact we just held an accessible cell phone seminar over here a couple weeks ago and demoed the SMT5800, the Nokia n82, the Blackberry Curve, Motorola Droid, the iPhone and the Samsung Haven. The iPhone was a hands down favorite. You’re right to talk about the iPhone as more than just a phone but as a platform. A platform for so many things that, when purchased individually, cost many more times the price of an iPhone. Color identifiers, OCR software, GPS just to name a few, are available at a nominal cost.
We will be offering an online course in using accessible cell phones in the next few weeks and we have some video from last weeks seminar. I’ll let you know when its available.
Enjoy!
Hope this will be reprinted in magazines all over the world. Beautiful and eye-opening (perhaps as much to us sighted but in a completely different sense).
What I’ve just read really moved me.
I did know that the iPhone had different kind of accesibility options but I couldn’t even dream of how good they actually were.
I’m really glad for you, that you got to experience something new that made you and your family happy.
I hope other companies and organisation follow and make their products more accessible to people with disabilities.
Thanks for sharing, What a great story!
I was very moved by this article. Thank you so much for writing it. I have an iPhone and had never given a thought to whether it was truly accessible to all. My husband is a programmer and I sent this post to him. He said he’d often seen the accessibility guidelines as things to do only if required because of the extra work involved, but now his mind is changed. I know so many programmers love technology and get excited about its possibilities – I hope this piece brings more of them to the realization that they can contribute to a programming culture that strives to make accessibility a priority.
I’m very glad I stumbled upon this article trough the suggestion of a friend. As a graphic designer I felt moved by you being able to “identify” colors now. Great stuff!
Thank you for sharing your beautiful story!
Hi! Thanks for sharing this touching story. I’m from Finland, and I saw this link in the internet site of a finnish newspaper. It is pretty nice to see that this even gets some international attention.
Very impressive experience
Wow!
I’m happy that the iPhone helps you with your surrounding, very happy for you. I now have even more respect for Apple!
Awsom Austin, I have been fighting with ATT for years on why can’t the industry of cell phone manufactures come up with a phone for the low vision or even blind community. My wife has been visualy imparred most of her life. What pisses her off most today is not being able to operate a phone with voiceover. I found one with limmited features but they wanted my first born. Anyway, hope all techs out there listen, so others can see
Think you for your writing.
I am also blind and studying social work in USA.
Austin, what kind of stock charts were you able to read? What information did you get from them?
Solid Austin. I’m pretty visually impaired, but Zoomtext (for this application anyway) also allowed me to hear that you’ve a talent for writing as well. Thanks for your review of the Ifun (as my 16 year old calls it), describing the possibilities of a touchpad, and for taking the time to elaborate just how one operates the touchpad interface. It’s good to know that Itunes is a joke for us, but that won’t stop me – just keep my expectations realistic. The review was both informative and a good read! I know what I’ll be graduating to when my 2-year cell phone plan is up.
Great for you, I am not blind but tested a similar app for HTC Desire Android in may 2010. It worked great and it told me the objects and its colour of what it saw.
Keep us posted of your experience.
Thank you for an excellent write-up about your experiences with the iPhone’s accessibility features. One of our students took to the touch screen within a few minutes, which surprised not only her but her teachers too.
I’m expecting this technology to improve at a rapid pace. If voice recognition gets better as quickly as the touch-screen reader, there’ll be some really productive apps around for blind people.
I will e-mail our students with a link to this post.
I have just read your very interesting article, having been given the link to it by a poster on the JREF forums where I am a member.
I have only some peripheral vision. I shall certainly be investigating further. I am amazed that you can text on it.
Amazing story. Thank you for sharing your experiences.
iT IS AMAZING TO HIER OF SUCH GREAT INOVATION.
i HAVE HEARD THAT THERE IS A COVER , OR A POCKET AVAILABLE FOR TYHE IPHONE, THAT ENABLES THE BLIND TO USE THE IPHONE.
mY QUESTION IS, WHERE CAN I ODER, OR PURCHASE THE SAID COVER, OR THE PACKET, I REARLY WANT TO BE A PART TAKER OF THIS GREAT EXPERISNCE.
HOOP TO HIER FROM YOU SOON.
DANIEL.
Austin – your adaption of the color reader function is inspiring. Maybe you can expand on that line of thinking. Seems there could be some combination of color reading and sound feed-back that could “read” a walking surface for average color and note obstacles or changes? Locations like hospitals, offices, etc. could be set up with standardized color navigation stripes. Signs and posters could have a 2D bar code that returns voice response when scanned. This function may exist already, most 2-D returns a website or advert visually that may just be an image. Then the text read would not work. GPS and Image-recognition apps that can recognize landmarks and objects from a database could have a voice-response separate from text-read voice.
Your post has opened up a whole new channel of awareness for me as an information communicator. Thank You, – DavidP
This is a great article. It has encouraged me to pay more attention to screen readers like iOS VoiceOver when building websites.
It made me realize how invaluable the perspective of a visually impaired person would be when doing usability testing.
Although an iPhone user, I’ll admit I didn’t understand completely the technical ins and outs of this blog, but those last four paragraphs moved me to tears of joy. Beautiful!!
Pretty amazing stuff! Is this the iPhone 4 or do you know if upgrading to the OS4 will provide most of these features?
Hey Austin!
The accessibilty features in my ipad, are similarly thoughtful – I especially like the way you can set the device to read through your ibooks collection; which on one level is just fancy and on another, a totally revolutionary for bringing current voices to the world of audio (not better then, say LibroVox, but certainly more timely…).
I was too shy to say “Hi”to you at Ari’s cook-off – but now I’m bummed to have missed the chance. Perhaps I can help out with site redesign, or we can gab podcasting sometime. Seems like we have alot in common – I look forward to talking to you!
Hi Austen
Thank you for your nice post. You will soon see it in our next press release “Steve Jobs cures the blind”.
Linda
Apple PR
Your story continues to travel. I’m from France and was moved by your story. I’m happy for you.
Best.
Nicolas
Thanks for this moving story, Austin. We are working on an application for Delta Airlines and will be using some of your experiences to try to go beyond the standard accessibility capabilities.
Austin,
your story really touched me. I’m a graphic designer at the third year of an Italian university, and now I have to choose a thesis to graduate; my idea was to build a multitouch widescreen (based on FTIR technology, something that even a single non-technician student can afford) and just experiment new web and software UIs, but since this article I had no idea about how my work could be useful. Often UI studies and researches end up with little user experience improvement and a lot of graphic useless fireworks; but in the future my aim will be to think with a blindness approach, in order to help who, like you do, want to enhance his life experience.
I don’t know if I will succeed; I hope to stay in touch with you to communicate my little achievements.
Have a nice day,
Luigi
Austin, I just wanted to let you know that you inspired me to add proper and full VoiceOver support to my iPhone App. Many thanks for helping me to realize that accessibility should not be an after-thought.
This article was written very well, and it definitely has me excited about purchasing an Iphone. The fact that I can get, read, and reply to email and text messages is great. But the idea of the Iphone describing colors to me leaves me speechless. Thanks for your evaluation.
Great post. Some really useful information.
Thanks for sharing your experience with the i
Phone. My son is a bright, joyous 8 year old child who
is blind. He is a Braille reader and a Braille note
user. When do you think we should get him
a i phone?
This was such an amazing blog, you’ve had so many comments I am sure you have stopped reading them!
I hope you are still keeping up, because I’d love you to get in touch with me about whether we can feature you for a guest blog on our website for World Usability Day? I already have 1 screen reader talking about how descriptions help him to make clothing decisions. I’d love to add what you were saying about how the colour app was helping to communicate the world around you.
Email me or find me on twitter @bunnyfootsays Would love to talk to you more!
Good morning Austin,
I am a volunteer reader with Central Kentucky Radio Eye, a radio reading service for handicapped and vision-impaired persons living within about 100 miles of Lexington, KY. I just this morning recorded the Bluegrass Council for the Blind’s monthly Bulletin, which was a review of the iPhone and some apps. It included (with full credit) the text of this blog entry. I thought you’d like to know- and to also know that it was read by somebody who knows how to pronounce Gnome and what a Discordian is. Best wishes.
-Amanda M
Hi Austin,
very moving story about an assistive technology assisting in unexpected ways. Thank you.
Best regards, Andrew
This is a truly moving and remarkable tale, Austin. My colleague came across your blog when she was preparing for the module we teach on Informatics in Clinical Education and she passed the link to me. I have now sent it to the class. One of my hobby horses is reducing unnecessary barriers and within this is the idea of sensitising doctors and other healthcare workers to the ease with which they can design their websites to be as accessible as possible to their intended audience.
Well done. In this age of cynicism, there is little that has one go ‘wow’. Your story did and I felt honoured to read it.
david
I thank you so much for your insite on this product. My husband is blind and for years he was sheltered by family and did not get much use with technology. Since we have been married I have made it my mission to get him as much possible to make things easier and more interesting to him. I was doing research for myself an iPhone, but after reading your story I have placed my order on hold but he will be receiving his soon! Thanks
I am a iphone user visually impaired as well and I love it!
I wish this story reached product, software and interaction designers, so they could understand the importance of making products that are also usable for blind persons.
Great story!
I never saw the iPhone this way … for that mather, I never saw life this way … I’m very happy that this device gives you a better life, this is like #heather sead, realy unbelievable what we, 99,9% of people take for granted …
This story is amazing.
Great article! Hope you’re enjoying your phone!
My sister is blind. It was always my job as a kid to go out to the mailbox, and tote in her braille books and books on tape. She’d get new issues of books and magazines every week or so. It makes me chuckle to think how 30 pounds of paper and tape have transformed into a simple eBook or podcast! In this regard, technology warms my heart – especially when companies strive to make sure the blind don’t get left behind.
Thanks for sharing.
Hello,
I am just here with my blind uncle, reading this article for him. He used to use LG MX500 which he could say the commands. But it is a CDMA cellphone and now it is disable because of GSM. So we started looking for a cellfone which had the funcionality for blind people. We passed throught Nokia Nuance Talks, but now I am thinking about changing for Iphone. WOW ! What a surprise.!
Thakz my friend, for helping us with this exciting article.
me too.. im beginner ipad
Amen to this, brotha’! I know I am late on reading this but my husband sent me a link to this a long time ago, and I am only now getting around to it. Going to link this to my own blog. Thanks for a thorough, personal, and entertaining read.
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