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Mobile Phones Accessibility Discussion Axel Leblois , G3ict

Mobile Phones Accessibility Discussion Axel Leblois , G3ict. November 1, 2010 Odessa. Three Tenets of Universal Design. User centered: Recognizing the range of different capabilities and skills, past experiences, wants and opinions within the population

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Mobile Phones Accessibility Discussion Axel Leblois , G3ict

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  1. Mobile Phones AccessibilityDiscussionAxel Leblois, G3ict November 1, 2010 Odessa

  2. Three Tenets of Universal Design User centered: Recognizing the range of different capabilities and skills, past experiences, wants and opinions within the population Population aware:  Understanding the quantitative population statistics is vital to inform design decisions Business focused: Achieving profitability in the commercial context and sustainability in the public context

  3. The RakuRaku Story 2001-2009 • NTT DoCoMo Market Situation in 2001 • Overall penetration of cell phones in Japan: 82.6% • NTT DoCoMo market share: 51% • Opportunity: rate of utilization decreases significantly with age (90+% aged 20 to 50; less than 30% above 70) • Decision to tackle issue across organization, products and services • Adoption of Universal Design principles • Cell phone handsets, stores & services

  4. Source: NTT DoCoMo presentation at ITU – UNESCAP meeting in Bangkok, August 26, 2009

  5. Example of “RakuRaku” Accessible and Assistive Features and Services A large screen with large characters Dedicated buttons to call certain pre-recorded numbers automatically “Read aloud” menus and text Voice input text messages and email Access to a network of talking books (Bibulio-net, 12,395 titles as of March 2009) with an integrated DAISY player An optional bone conductor receiver to transmit sound waves directly from bone to nerve

  6. Initiative Launched September 2001 How many Raku-Raku phones have been sold by NTT DoCoMo in Japan since then?

  7. Initiative Launched September 2001 How many Raku-Raku phones have been sold by NTT DoCoMo since then? 15 Million!

  8. The RakuRaku A real world story involving a leading telecommunications company When marketing discipline meets accurate demographic statistics Illustrates the power of Universal Design to address the needs of persons with disabilities

  9. The Demographic Challenge: Data Analysis and Awareness Raising for Policy Development “People with disabilities are often invisible in official statistics” Education for All Global Monitoring Report 2006, UNESCO

  10. Very likely to benefit 17% Likely to benefit 40% Beyond PWDs: 57% of Microsoft Windows Customers Use its Accessibility Features 57% of computer users (age 18-64 in the US) are likely or very likely to benefit from accessibility features • 1 in 4 users experiences a visual difficulty. • 1 in 4 experience pain in wrists or hands. • 1 in 5 has a hearing difficulty. Not likelyto benefit 43% Study commissioned by Microsoft, Conducted by Forrester Research in 2003

  11. Mobile Phones and Services Accessibility • Basic accessibility features are easy to implement, and exist today: • Ergonomic design • Adaptive display and sound • Hearing aid compatibility • New handset technology includes: • Text to Speech, voice recognition • Scanner capability • GPS – triangulation positioning • Bone sound conduction • Remote services • Emergency services • Digital libraries • E-Government services • Blue tooth proximity services

  12. Policy Alternatives Private sector initiative (Japan) Voluntary multi-stakeholder negotiation (France) Strict regulation (Canada)

  13. Accessibility Charter among Mobile Operators – France Case Study • Government, users, operators sign charter in 2005 • Voluntary program with milestones and monitoring for implementing features with defined priorities: • Necessary features • Comfort features • Desirable new features and evolution • Marketing codification of accessibility features

  14. 600,000 Brochures Circulated

  15. Accessibility Features Codification

  16. France Case Study - Results Each operator offers between 10 and 20 accessible handsets in 2009 Specialized point of sales with trained personnel New services launched (News in sign language, accessible city and accessible mobile tourism web sites etc.)

  17. Accessibility and AssistiveFeaturesfor Mobile Phones

  18. Basic Hearing Accessibility Features Visual alerts to notify the user of incoming calls/messages Adjustable volume control Display of missed, received or dialed calls through call logs Visual or tactile indicators showing what has been pressed on the keypad, and visual display of text Text based messaging options SMS to Avatar translation for deaf illiterate (Tunisia) One on one video for sign language communications

  19. SMS and Sign Language

  20. Vision – Basic Accessibility Features Tactile markers to help orient fingers on the keypad Audible or tactile feedback to confirm a button has been pressed Adjustable font sizes Audible cues for low battery, caller waiting or ending a call and volume level Adjustable brightness/contrast controls for the display The size of the main display Backlit display

  21. Vocalisation

  22. Speech – Basic Accessibility Features Text Messaging/SMS Email Instant Messaging Multi-media Messaging Predictive Text Re-use of personalized SMS messages Video one on one for sign language

  23. Dexterity Ability to use the phone in 'hands-free' mode Predictive text input Call answered by pressing any key Voice recognition for dialing or accessing features within the phone No pinching, twisting or rotation of the wrist needed Candy bar design to avoid extra movements (that a phone with a folding or sliding design requires) Flat back on the phone to allow for operation on a table top rather than having to be held Optional accessories such as a Bluetooth headset or keyboard making texting and talking much easier

  24. Cognition Menus and instructions clear and simple to understand Providing simple instructions when something is required from the user Providing enough time for people to enter the required information Ability to associate photos with telephone numbers Other features that may be useful include: Having a choice between audio, visual or vibrating alerts to let users know when they're receiving a call Keys provide audio, visual and tactile feedback when pressed Popular functions such as placing a call controlled by repeating pre-recorded voice commands Help menus designed to anticipate the information being sought Keypad shortcuts to make every step quick and efficient

  25. Customer Service Features

  26. What the Future Holds http://www.capturatalk.com/

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