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Apple today previewed many new accessibility features coming later this year with software updates like iOS 18, iPadOS 18, macOS 15, and visionOS 2. The announcement comes one day ahead of Global Accessibility Awareness Day.

iOS-18-Hover-Typing-Feature.jpg

The key new accessibility features for the iPhone and/or iPad will include:

  • Eye Tracking
  • Music Haptics
  • Vocal Shortcuts
  • Vehicle Motion Cues

Mac users will gain the ability to customize VoiceOver keyboard shortcuts, and Mandarin support for Personal Voice, while the Vision Pro will get systemwide Live Captions, Reduce Transparency, Smart Invert, and Dim Flashing Lights.

Eye Tracking

iPadOS-18-Eye-Tracking.jpg

Apple says Eye Tracking on the iPhone and iPad will allow users to navigate system interfaces and apps with just their eyes:

Powered by artificial intelligence, Eye Tracking gives users a built-in option for navigating iPad and iPhone with just their eyes. Designed for users with physical disabilities, Eye Tracking uses the front-facing camera to set up and calibrate in seconds, and with on-device machine learning, all data used to set up and control this feature is kept securely on device, and isn't shared with Apple.

Eye Tracking works across iPadOS and iOS apps, and doesn't require additional hardware or accessories. With Eye Tracking, users can navigate through the elements of an app and use Dwell Control to activate each element, accessing additional functions such as physical buttons, swipes, and other gestures solely with their eyes.
Music Haptics

iOS-18-Music-Haptics.jpg

When this feature is turned on, the iPhone's Taptic Engine will play "taps, textures, and refined vibrations" that correspond with the audio of the music:

Music Haptics is a new way for users who are deaf or hard of hearing to experience music on iPhone. With this accessibility feature turned on, the Taptic Engine in iPhone plays taps, textures, and refined vibrations to the audio of the music. Music Haptics works across millions of songs in the Apple Music catalog, and will be available as an API for developers to make music more accessible in their apps.
Vocal Shortcuts

Vocal Shortcuts will allow iPhone and iPad users to assign "custom utterances" that Siri can understand to "launch shortcuts and complete complex tasks."

iOS-18-Vocal-Shortcuts.jpeg

Vehicle Motion Cues

vehicle-motion-cues.jpg

This feature is designed to reduce motion sickness while looking at an iPhone or iPad's screen in a moving vehicle:
With Vehicle Motion Cues, animated dots on the edges of the screen represent changes in vehicle motion to help reduce sensory conflict without interfering with the main content. Using sensors built into iPhone and iPad, Vehicle Motion Cues recognizes when a user is in a moving vehicle and responds accordingly. The feature can be set to show automatically on iPhone, or can be turned on and off in Control Center.
Read our standalone coverage of this feature to learn more.

CarPlay

CarPlay-Sound-Recognition.jpg

CarPlay will be gaining Voice Control, Color Filters, and Sound Recognition.

Sound Recognition on CarPlay will allow drivers or passengers who are deaf or hard of hearing to turn on alerts to be notified of car horns and sirens.

Live Captions on Vision Pro

Vision-Pro-Live-Captions.jpg

visionOS 2 will support Live Captions, allowing users who are deaf or hard of hearing to follow along with spoken dialogue in live conversations and in audio from apps.

More Features

iOS-18-Hover-Typing.jpg
Hover Typing will show larger text when typing in a text field

Apple outlined many more accessibility features coming to its platforms later this year:
- For users who are blind or have low vision, VoiceOver will include new voices, a flexible Voice Rotor, custom volume control, and the ability to customize VoiceOver keyboard shortcuts on Mac.
- Magnifier will offer a new Reader Mode and the option to easily launch Detection Mode with the Action button.
- Braille users will get a new way to start and stay in Braille Screen Input for faster control and text editing; Japanese language availability for Braille Screen Input; support for multi-line braille with Dot Pad; and the option to choose different input and output tables.
- For users with low vision, Hover Typing shows larger text when typing in a text field, and in a user’s preferred font and color.
- For users at risk of losing their ability to speak, Personal Voice will be available in Mandarin Chinese. Users who have difficulty pronouncing or reading full sentences will be able to create a Personal Voice using shortened phrases.
- For users who are nonspeaking, Live Speech will include categories and simultaneous compatibility with Live Captions.
- For users with physical disabilities, Virtual Trackpad for AssistiveTouch allows users to control their device using a small region of the screen as a resizable trackpad.
- Switch Control will include the option to use the cameras in iPhone and iPad to recognize finger-tap gestures as switches.
- Voice Control will offer support for custom vocabularies and complex words.
Apple is expected to unveil iOS 18 and more at its developers conference WWDC on June 10, and the software updates will be widely released later this year.

Article Link: Apple Announces iOS 18 Accessibility Features, Including Eye Tracking
 
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NT1440

macrumors G5
May 18, 2008
14,758
21,450
Incredible. Just another example of how technologies they develop in one product make their way into other products in their ecosystem. I don’t see any other company doing this as well as Apple, or at all.
Lots of these debuted in the Vision Pro, like the sound recognition where you can train actions to a tongue click, mouth pop, etc.

No other company has accessibility baked into the core of their products and frankly this is one space where Apple truly does not get the praise it deserves for it.

They’ve been this way for a long time too, I was in college and a classmate of mine was blind but used a MacBook Air for class without issue. This was over a decade ago.

 

hybra

macrumors regular
Jul 29, 2009
110
50
also for those impaired normals too lazy to lift a finger or say (hey) Siri
 

Populus

macrumors 601
Aug 24, 2012
4,976
7,247
Spain, Europe
Okay, I will admit that navigating my iPad using my eyes and moving my hand is pretty, pretty cool. I hope this works well on “older devices” such as my M2 iPad Pro.
 

carswell

macrumors member
Mar 27, 2023
51
173
This **** better come with an off switch. Otherwise, I ain't upgrading.

ETA: Totally in favour of accessibility features for those who need them. But I don't for now and don't want Siri or anybody/thing else monitoring or tracking me without my permission and without an easy way to rescind that permission once granted.
 
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ignatius345

macrumors 604
Aug 20, 2015
7,032
11,574
I always go through the Accessibility features. It's where Apple hides some the best tweaks.

Just last night I found a setting on Apple TV that puts a nice bright outline around icons and buttons so they're easier to pick out. (The default setting of the selected icon just slightly shifting size was just too subtle for me).
 

blw777

macrumors member
Jun 6, 2022
82
103
I'd love for this to come to MacOS, at least to change input focus. I don't know how many times (thousands per year for sure) that I type in one window, look at another one, and type "into" the new window only for the input to go to the other one, that I'm no longer looking at. A quarter of a century ago both X-windows and NeWS had the notion of input focus moving with the mouse, but that seems to have gone out the window for everyone. This could bring rationality back.
 

twintin

macrumors 6502a
Aug 10, 2012
754
286
Sweden
Cool! Now I can delete fotos again I deleted years ago, but keep appearing since the new iOS 17 bugs, I can delete them just with my eyes!
Yeah. You only need to close your eyes once and never open them again and all photos will be gone. :)

Personally I just waiting for my device to read my mind so I don't have to look at it at all. :)
 
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