[nfbcs] FW: compiling iPhone apps to Android apps
Mike Freeman
k7uij at panix.com
Fri Mar 27 22:26:49 UTC 2015
Joseph:
This post will not address your post below except to say that many of the
things you do not like about the Apple system are in the nature of
preferences rather than absolute advantages or disadvantages. You may not
like the way Apple does things; that's cool. But for some of us, at least
some of the things you dislike aren't really drawbacks but, rather, are just
the way Apple chooses to set things up.
In other words, we are, in effect, engaging in a similar discussion as to
whether JAWS, Window-eyes or NVDA is the best Windows screen-reader. There
just isn't a one-size-fits-all answer. In other words:
Different strokes for different folks.
Mike Freeman
-----Original Message-----
From: nfbcs [mailto:nfbcs-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Joseph C.
Lininger via nfbcs
Sent: Friday, March 27, 2015 3:10 PM
To: NFB in Computer Science Mailing List
Subject: Re: [nfbcs] FW: compiling iPhone apps to Android apps
I've been hearing a lot of talk about how great Apple's accessibility
is, how that in Android is lacking, etc. However, as of today I'm just
not seeing it. I'm not necessarily saying you're wrong, as I don't have
an Apple device. That being said, I've watched people using them and I'm
not seeing a lot of difference in their capabilities using an iphone and
mine using a Galaxy S4. A couple of years ago, I would have said there
was a major difference. I won a Galaxy S3 tablet in a raffle, and it
just didn't work that well as far as accessibility goes. However, my
Galaxy S4 phone has a newer version of Android and is much more capable
as far as accessibility goes. I can even install things from Google Play
and they usually work. In fact, there has been exactly 1, count it, 1
app that I just flat could not use. It was one that came with the
device. I would be interested in hearing about what abilities the iphone
has accessibility-wise that I don't have with my Galaxy S4.
What I have seen, and what made me make the original choice of Android
over Apple is that the Android offers me some choices that are simply
not available with the iphone. I can use an SD card to exchange data
between my machines if I want to; I'm not required to pass data over a
network or sharing service. I can synchronize my address book, calendar,
and task list wiht that in Thunderbird by installing a program on my
computer and an app on my phone. I can connect my phone to my computer
and have it appear as a drive so I can transfer files if I want to do
that. No itunes or other software required to make that work. (Apple
might have that ability too; unsure) I can write software and load it on
the device over USB without publishing it to Google Play.
In the interest of complete honesty, I will admit that I am not overly
fond of how the dialer works. It's not the easiest thing in the world to
get it to cooperate and work the way I'd like, although I'm not sure how
much of that is an access issue and how much of it is just that I don't
like the way it operates. I think it's a bit of both, actually. From
what I saw, the one in the iphone works more the way I would like. I
wouldn't make a purchase dicision based on that, but I do acknowledge it.
Joe
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