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Apple puts Environment VP Lisa Jackson in charge of boosting accessibility efforts

Apple Watch Accessibility Settings

Apple told employees during a week at the flagship Berlin Apple Store in Germany that the company will increase its focus on product accessibility by putting executive Lisa Jackson in charge of the efforts, according to people in attendance. Asked by an Apple Store employee if the Apple Watch will include accessibility features, Cook reportedly replied:

Yes is the short answer. In every product we do, we want it to be accessible for everyone. This is not something that we sit around and figure out what the ROI is. I can give a rats what the ROI is. It’s one of those things that goes in the just and right column. So we want all of our products to be accessible. In the point that you we are on, I think we need to raise the awareness of accessibility, and I’ve asked Lisa Jackson to work on this. She’s done a great job on the environmental impact, and I tend to think we can do the same thing with accessibility and create an even better environment than what other companies do. The Watch will start with doing some things, but it will become better at more things over time. You can make a call from the Watch… You can interface with Siri. Siri with this point comes back in a textual mode, but we’d like to do something different with that over time. But it’s cool for all of us, but I think it is going to be profound for some people. More on this.

Lisa Jackson joined Apple in 2013 as its Vice President of Environmental affairs, previously serving as the head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Jackson’s experience in raising awareness of global issues, combined with her government and industry connections, makes her a prime candidate for boosting Apple’s efforts in accessibility…

While Cook did not go into detail about the Watch’s Accessibility features, the Apple Watch Companion application that we detailed earlier this year sheds some light on Apple’s plans. Here are the bullet points for accessibility that we covered in that earlier article:

  • To access Accessibility Settings on the fly, users will triple-click the Digital Crown.
  • The Apple Watch will have a VoiceOver feature that can speak text that is displayed on the screen. Users will be able to scroll through text to be spoken using two fingers. VoiceOver can be enabled either by merely raising a wrist or by double tapping the display.
  • Users will also be able to zoom on the Apple Watch’s screen: double tap with two fingers to zoom, use two fingers to pan around, and double tap while dragging to adjust the zoom.
  • There will also be accessibility settings to reduce motion, control stereo audio balance, reduce transparency, switch to grayscale mode, disable system animations, and enable bold text.

As Cook said, more enhancements will come over time in future generations of the Watch’s hardware and software. For context, Apple tends to add new accessibility features to iOS for the iPhone and iPad year-after-year via the major annual upgrades. The National Federation of the Blind notably has said that Apple “has done more for accessibility than any other company.”

On the topic of raising awareness of global issues, Cook is said to have said that “Apple is investing in education like never before.” Cook said that Apple is moving to lift “underserved and underprivileged” students by supplying Apple products. “The early results are very heartwarming,” Cook told employees at the Germany meeting. Cook also said that Apple is working on improved career development programs to bring more people out of universities to Apple.

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Comments

  1. Kym Primrose - 9 years ago

    It’s nice that accessiblility is taking precidence in companies like Apple, but until it is the foundation the OS will never be truly accessible. Sorry to burst that bubble…

    • Gazoo Bee - 9 years ago

      Your statement about the “foundation” makes no sense. Accessibility is designed into all Apple products (and always has been) at the lowest level of the OS, and the base level of the hardware (VoiceOver and the Home button being two obvious examples).

      The iPhone and the iPad were pretty much the very FIRST phones that blind people could use easily. I find that rather amazing myself.

      Sure there are failures from time to time, like when they redesigned the OS in iOS 7, but overall your statement is untrue as far as I can see. Unless you are meaning something completely different than I think you are by the term “foundation.”

      • rwanderman - 9 years ago

        While I agree with most of your comment, some of it just isn’t true.

        In the early days we had Easy Access on the Mac, a desk accessory that was not working at the lowest level of the OS. Later, when the iMac came out (the second coming of Steve Jobs) Apple decided to disband their worldwide disabilities solutions group (which I consulted for) and work toward building accessibility into the OS at a lower level. Since then things have moved along at about the same pace as other OS’s but I’m quite happy with what Apple has done and under Cook, I think things will only get better.

      • Kym Primrose - 9 years ago

        I inderstand, but by ‘foundation’ I mean the OS is built ground up from an inclusive access perspective. The OS was not built for visually impaired it was adapted to suit. But by reversing the design process a better interface can be designed. I am in no way insulting Apple. They currently have the most accessible phone OS and I have several of their products. I am just saying that they have made a lot of compromises due to the process they have used. If that makes sense. Thanks for your feedback.

  2. bartonlynch - 9 years ago

    Need a color blind mode