We have spoken on several occasions about what the accessibility of the Apple guys products. An accessibility that makes people with disabilities can use without problems from a Mac to an iPhone, through the Apple Watch. And is that if you do not have any disability you will never have noticed the possibilities offered by iDevices for blind or deaf people, among many other disabilities.
Yes, a blind person can take photos with their iPhone, they are prepared to give approximate indications of what is being focused so that the photograph comes out as perfect as possible. Obviously it is necessary for someone to activate these features, but you only have to go through the accessibility section within the preferences of your devices to realize everything that Apple offers us in this regard. For all this, and for all that will come, Apple just received the Louis Braille award, an award that urges all the effort that Apple makes in the field of accessibility of its devices ...
Thank you @ASBPhiladelphia for honoring Apple with the Louis Braille Award. Proud of our team's dedication to #accessibility. pic.twitter.com/mnAGD8EUH5
- Tim Cook (@tim_cook) January 27, 2017
As you can see in the tweet above, from the account of Tim Cook, has been the agency of Associated Services for the Blind the one that has awarded this award to the boys of the block. An award that recognizes that iOS It was the first operating system for mobile devices to have integrated accessibility solutions; the Apple Watch, who has the honor of being the first accessible wearable; and the Mac, which, as they recognize, was the first platform to include a screen reader.
An award in which all Apple employees are participants, in fact, the woman who holds the award in the photograph, Jordyn Castor, is an Apple engineer blind from birth, one more sample of all the efforts made by the company to reach as many audiences as possible.