Hi John,
I am using Android phones now for 4 and a half years.
I find the OS completely accessible.
According to many its as accessible as iOS.
Some apps might have some unlabeled buttons but i guess that problem exists with iOS as well.
I don't use braille so i can't say anything about that.
Greetings,
Simon
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Simon Eigeldinger
Informatik
Nebengebäude 1, OG1
Stadt Hohenems
Kaiser-Franz-Josef-Straße 4
6845 Hohenems
T: +43 5576 7101-1143 | E: simon.eigeldinger@hohenems.at | www.hohenems.at
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-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: John G. Heim via Blind-sysadmins
Gesendet: Samstag, 20. November 2021 16:36
An: blind system administrators
Cc: John G. Heim
Betreff: [Blind-sysadmins] Recommendations for small tablet?
I've always owned both an iPod Touch and an iPhone. The reason is that I
don't want to carry my phone around all the time. So I am doing yard
work, home repairs, working out or whatever, getting my iPod wet and
dirty and wearing down the battery. Meanwhile, my iPhone stays safe and
fully charged. But recently, I've gotten more and more irritated with
Apple. For example, they got rid of the feature in the MacOS iTunes app
that allows you to sync your music library with your IOS devices. So now
I no longer have a way to get all the music I ripped from my old CD-ROMS
to my iPod Touch.
I was wondering if anyone has a recommendation for an Android device
that is similar to the iPod Touch. How accessible is Android these days?
I'm not too worried about getting used to a new operating system. But as
a long time IOS user, am I going to be disappointed with the
accessibility of Android?
-
###
John G. Heim, 608-263-4189, jheim@math.wisc.edu
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