Day 34: TalkBack on Android
Published on
A diversion from my quality assurance research this week out of necessity of testing with an Android screen reader at work. Time spent today: 2 hours.
Things I accomplished
Permalink for "Things I accomplished"- Wrote a brief post on behalf of my full-time employer to educate people about getting started with testing websites with TalkBack.
- Watch Deque's webinar Intro to Talkback.
- Read through some Google's Getting Started with TalkBack documentation.
- Experimented using TalkBack on an old Samsung Galaxy S5, and referred often to Deque's quick reference to TalkBack.
- Reviewed WebAIM's recent Screen Reader User Survey Results.
What I learned today
Permalink for "What I learned today"- TalkBack wasn't too different from my experience with VoiceOver gestures. Some minor gesture differences.
- The equivalent functionality to VoiceOver's rotor is the Local Context Menu.
- TalkBack quick access can be updated to a triple-click of the Home button of my S5 to turn it on.
- TalkBack keyboard events are not the same as touch events. It can be hard to develop for all TalkBack users (some keyboard users, some touch users).
- 29.5% of respondents to WebAIM's screen reader survey said they use TalkBack.
- A two-finger or three-finger swipe navigates me through my multiple screens.
- The "explore by touch" feature reads focusable items as I drag my finger around the screen.
- Entering my PIN was easier for me to enter with TalkBack then it was with VoiceOver.