Setting up voiceover – Apple iPod touch iOS 4.3 User Manual

Page 192

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Setting Up VoiceOver

Important:

VoiceOver changes the gestures used to control iPod touch. Once

VoiceOver is turned on, you have to use VoiceOver gestures to operate iPod touch—
even to turn VoiceOver off again to resume standard operation.
Turn VoiceOver on or off: In Settings, choose General > Accessibility > VoiceOver and
tap the VoiceOver On/Off switch.
You can also set Triple-click Home to turn VoiceOver on or off. See “Triple-Click Home”
on page 206.

Note: You can’t use VoiceOver and Zoom at the same time.
Turn spoken hints on or off: In Settings, choose General > Accessibility > VoiceOver,
and tap the Speak Hints On/Off switch. When Speak Hints is turned on, VoiceOver
may tell you the action of the item or provide instructions for you—for example,
“double-tap to open.” Speak Hints is turned on by default.
Set the VoiceOver speaking rate: In Settings, choose General > Accessibility >
VoiceOver, and adjust the Speaking Rate slider.
Add speaking rate to the rotor: In Settings, choose General > Accessibility and tap to
turn on “Include in Rotor.”
You can choose the kind of feedback you get when you type. You can set VoiceOver to
speak characters, words, both, or nothing. If you choose to hear both characters and
words, VoiceOver speaks each character as you type it, then speaks the whole word
when you finish it by entering a space or punctuation.
Choose typing feedback: In Settings, choose General > Accessibility > VoiceOver >
Typing Feedback. You can choose Characters, Words, Characters and Words, or Nothing
for software keyboards and for an Apple Wireless Keyboard (see “Using an Apple
Wireless Keyboard
” on page 34).

Use phonetics

In Settings, choose General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then
tap the Use Phonetics switch to turn it on.
Use this feature when you type or read character-by-
character, to help make clear which characters were spoken.
When Use Phonetics is turned on, Voiceover first speaks the
character, then speaks a word beginning with the character.
For example, if you type the character “f,” VoiceOver speaks
“f,” and then a moment later, “foxtrot.”

Use pitch change

In Settings, choose General > Accessibility > VoiceOver, then
tap the Use Pitch Change switch to turn it on.
VoiceOver uses a higher pitch when entering a letter, and
a lower pitch when deleting a letter. VoiceOver also uses a
higher pitch when speaking the first item of a group (such
as a list or table) and a lower pitch when speaking the last
item of a group.

192

Chapter 27

Accessibility

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