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Thread: Mobile App Accessibility

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Number of posts in this thread: 11 (In chronological order)

From: McDonald, Jennifer
Date: Fri, May 20 2011 2:33PM
Subject: Mobile App Accessibility
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Hi everyone,

Does anyone have any information about best development practices when
creating a native mobile app? I understand that devices either include
accessibility software, or software can be purchased for them, but what
can be done on a development side to make sure that the application
works well with the accessibility functions of the device. I haven't
been able to find any information online regarding this yet.

Thank you,

Jeni McDonald


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From: Léonie Watson
Date: Fri, May 20 2011 2:48PM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Jeni McDonald wrote:
"Does anyone have any information about best development practices when creating a native mobile app?"

You didn't mention which variety of native app, but an article I wrote a little while ago covers some of the basics for iOS app accessibility:
http://www.nomensa.com/blog/2011/ios-app-accessibility/



Regards,
Léonie.

--
Nomensa - humanising technology

Léonie Watson, Director of Accessibility & Web Development

tel: +44 (0)117 929 7333
twitter: @we_are_Nomensa @LeonieWatson

From: Patrick Burke
Date: Fri, May 20 2011 3:00PM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Hi Jenni,

W3C documents may be daunting, but they do address this issue directly.

Mobile Web Application Best Practices
http://www.w3.org/TR/mwabp/

Relationship between Mobile Web Best Practices (MWBP) and Web Content
Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG):
http://www.w3.org/TR/mwbp-wcag/

Maybe not an ideal start, but worth a shot.

Patrick

At 01:26 PM 5/20/2011, McDonald, Jennifer wrote:
>Hi everyone,
>
>Does anyone have any information about best development practices when
>creating a native mobile app? I understand that devices either include
>accessibility software, or software can be purchased for them, but what
>can be done on a development side to make sure that the application
>works well with the accessibility functions of the device. I haven't
>been able to find any information online regarding this yet.
>
>Thank you,
>
>Jeni McDonald
>
>


--
Patrick J. Burke

Coordinator
UCLA Disabilities &
Computing Program

Phone: 310 206-6004
E-mail: burke <at> ucla. edu
Department Contact: = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =

From: Pratik Patel
Date: Sat, May 21 2011 5:27AM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Jeni McDonald wrote:
"Does anyone have any information about best development practices when
creating a native mobile app?"

For Apple iOS devices, you will find Apple's Human Interface Design
guidelines to be extremely useful.
http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/UserExperience/Concept
ual/MobileHIG/Introduction/Introduction.html

For Android, the accessibility API reference is useful.
http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/design/accessibility.html

Window Phone 7 does not yet have accessibility guidelines or API's. However,
in general, using native tools and native controls for developing apps is a
good start.

Pratik

From: Jim Allan
Date: Sat, May 21 2011 7:27PM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Note: for android. at a workshop at SXSW a google representative
stated that there is no requirement that the hardware platforms
include the accessibility API in the core of the OS. So it depends on
the phone and version as to whether the A11y API is installed. Writing
an accessible app on android may or may not work for the end user.

Jim

On Sat, May 21, 2011 at 6:18 AM, Pratik Patel < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = > wrote:
> Jeni McDonald wrote:
> "Does anyone have any information about best development practices when
> creating a native mobile app?"
>
> For Apple iOS devices, you will find Apple's Human Interface Design
> guidelines to be extremely useful.
> http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/UserExperience/Concept
> ual/MobileHIG/Introduction/Introduction.html
>
> For Android, the accessibility API reference is useful.
> http://developer.android.com/guide/practices/design/accessibility.html
>
> Window Phone 7 does not yet have accessibility guidelines or API's. However,
> in general, using native tools and native controls for developing apps is a
> good start.
>
> Pratik
>
>

From: Pratik Patel
Date: Sat, May 21 2011 7:36PM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
← Previous message | Next message →

Jim Wrote:
Note: for android. at a workshop at SXSW a google representative
stated that there is no requirement that the hardware platforms
include the accessibility API in the core of the OS. So it depends on
the phone and version as to whether the A11y API is installed. Writing
an accessible app on android may or may not work for the end user.

While Android's accessibility is certainly variable, the accessibility API
is not. The accessibility API is included in all Android experiences because
it's a part of the core. Google does not guarantee that the screen reader
and other access software developed by Google staff is included in the OS.
It is available to download from the Market as separate products.

That being said, Google's accessibility API is limited for now. There is
significant functionality that is lacking. Things such as focus are not
available for developers to tap into. Implementation of this API in apps
does make these apps more accessible. There are clear limitations to
Android; but apps can be made to be more accessible.

Regards,

Pratik

From: YOUNGV5
Date: Mon, May 23 2011 9:21AM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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The following PDF touches on accessibility for IOS (if it is inaccessible
I apologize for the author):

http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs193p/cgi-bin/drupal/system/files/lectures/Accessibility.pdf

I got this from the Stanford on-line IOS development course.

Vincent Young
Accessibility Manager
User Experience Team
Nationwide®
o | 614·677·5094
c | 614·607·3400
e | = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =




From:
Léonie Watson < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = >
To:
WebAIM Discussion List < = EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED = >
Date:
05/20/2011 04:50 PM
Subject:
Re: [WebAIM] Mobile App Accessibility
Sent by:
= EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =



Jeni McDonald wrote:
"Does anyone have any information about best development practices when
creating a native mobile app?"

You didn't mention which variety of native app, but an
article I wrote a little while ago covers some of the basics for iOS app
accessibility:
http://www.nomensa.com/blog/2011/ios-app-accessibility/



Regards,
Léonie.

--
Nomensa - humanising technology

Léonie Watson, Director of Accessibility & Web Development

tel: +44 (0)117 929 7333
twitter: @we_are_Nomensa @LeonieWatson

From: McDonald, Jennifer
Date: Tue, May 24 2011 10:12AM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Thanks for the article. That was very helpful. We're looking into releasing apps in these varieties - iPhone, Android, Blackberry.

From: Paul.Adam
Date: Wed, May 25 2011 4:09PM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Thanks for the Stanford link. I need to watch the video that goes along with it. I wanted to comment on this subject because mobile is one of the most exciting areas in accessibility for me currently. That and I'm hooked on all these iDevices.

I actually just gave a presentation on iPhone/iPad Web & App Accessibility at the annual AccessU accessibility conference by Knowbility in Austin, TX. It was lots of fun and I did a ton of research on everything iAccessibility.

Some topics I discussed are:
Screen Reader Costs on Smart Phone Platforms
CAPTCHA
HTML5 A11y
ARIA Support on iOS
Native App Accessibility in Xcode
iTunes
iBooks
AppleTV

http://pauljadam.com/presentations/accessu2011/index.html

Feel free to share the link with anyone interested. Right now iOS is the only truly accessible mobile platform that comes at no additional costs. I love that principle.

Paul Adam
Accessibility Specialist
Center for Policy and Innovation
= EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =



From: John E Brandt
Date: Thu, May 26 2011 2:21PM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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Thanks for sharing this Paul. Massive amount of work!

I hope iOS developers will use this to build/re-build more accessible apps.

I had to chuckle at your directions for building accessible e-pub doc. Sure
wish Apple would just add the capacity to add ALT text to images.

Thanks for references to accessibility issues for more than just screen
reader users.

Also, thanks for the reference to Calibre - awesome.

John E. Brandt
www.jebswebs.com
= EMAIL ADDRESS REMOVED =
207-622-7937
Augusta, Maine, USA


From: Joshue O Connor
Date: Tue, May 31 2011 1:18AM
Subject: Re: Mobile App Accessibility
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On 26/05/2011 21:20, John E Brandt wrote:
> Thanks for sharing this Paul. Massive amount of work!

Yes, thanks Paul! Your presentation is a really useful resource in
itself :-)

Cheers

Josh

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