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Operating System
Show only products that are compatible with the following operating systems.
A multilingual face-to-face conversation app for deaf-blind people.
Reads both accessible and inaccessible text aloud from websites, images, photographs, PDFs, web-based tests, and other media.
An app to see a text better when reading, read faster and understand what a user reads.
A speech synthesizer that supports 64-bit programs and 64-bit SAPI.
Text to speech program for the web.
An accessible reading app for Windows and iOS suitable for people with for dyslexia, low vision, and blindness.
Siri is a built-in "intelligent assistant," part of Apple Inc.'s iOS, watchOS, macOS, and tvOS operating systems.
A web-based screen reader for the web. It requires no special software to be installed on the client machine and, therefore, enables blind people to access the web from any computer they happen to have access to that has a sound card. Visit wa.cs.washington.edu to access WebAnywhere directly.
The Brailliant braille displays are two-way devices that enable users to both access information on a computer or mobile device as well as type on their devices indirectly by using the braille keyboard.
Portable 14-cell Braille display with five simultaneous Bluetooth connections and a USB 2.0 connection for a sixth. It provides access to mobile devices and personal computer systems.
An augmentative and alternative communication app designed to enable speech-impaired individuals to communicate more effectively.
An iOS PDF reader app that uses the user's face to scroll and zoom PDF documents. No pinching or tapping is needed to zoom PDF documents.
The brightness on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch can be adjusted from the from Control Center or Settings. People with certain types of vision limitations may benefit from lower contrast of colors.
Safari Reader is a feature of the Safari Browser that presents web content in a readable format without distractors that may limit the attention of the reader.
Zoom is a feature of iOS that magnifies all or part of the screen of an iOS device.
Modify the colors on the display to help a person with color blindness differentiate between the colors that they have difficulty seeing.
Tactile feedback alerts on mobile devices to complement or replace auditory/visual alerts.
Virtual assistants can generally set alarms, answer questions by querying information online, open applications and do other device-specific tasks.
Some people with low vision find light text on a black background and other color inversions to be more accessible than black text on a white background.
Stereo sound can be "mixed down" to monophonic sound so that all of the information (except the spatial distribution) is provided to both ears.
Allows a Braille user to utilize their separate Braille device as a keyboard and/or display for their computer or mobile device.
Audio descriptions can be added to video content, which provide brief descriptions of what is happening on screen. This can help individuals with visual or cognitive impairments better understand video content.
Closed captions are a feature of video that displays what is being said (approximately) in on-screen text. This allows a person who cannot hear the soundtrack (either because of hearing impairment or environmental noise) to understand what is being shown.
Change the brightness difference between the text and the background.
Many devices and operating systems offer the ability to adjust the default font size.