A blind student with long blond hair holds an iPhone.
Speak Screen: Dear student, congratulations! You have been accepted into the undergraduate(…)
The student gasps in excitement. In a living room, a student wearing glasses and using a motorized wheelchair raises his hands.
[EXCITED YELLING]
He smiles widely. Behind him, a woman gapes and presses her palms to her cheeks. In a kitchen, a student with four fingers on each hand sits while a woman stands close to her. They look at a computer. The student screams and shakes her arms excitedly. Behind her, a startled cat leaps to the floor from a stool. On a couch, a student with a blond bob and a septum piercing signs in American Sign Language.
Student with blond bob: [ASL] I’m going to college!
Back in the living room, the woman wraps her arms around the student using a motorized wheelchair, who closes his eyes and smiles.
Student using motorized wheelchair: I got into college.
[LIVELY POP ROCK PLAYS]
In Settings on an iPhone, a user taps Accessibility.
Lyrics: One!
Another person uses Magnifier on iPhone. The numeral 2 appears on their screen.
Lyrics: Two!
Another person types numbers on their iPhone screen using Braille Screen Input. Their fingers move in time to the lyrics, which appear on their screen in Notes.
Lyrics: One! Two! Three! Four!
A person wearing sneakers uses a white cane across a brick path in a collegiate quad.
VoiceOver: Starting route to lecture hall.
The blind student with long blond hair is revealed to be the person walking. She uses the white cane in one hand and holds iPhone in the other. She listens for walking directions and sings as students pass her?by.
Blind student with long blond hair: [SINGING] I’m not remarkable. I’m just finding my way.
VoiceOver: Turn left.
Blind student with long blond hair: [SINGING] It’s not a walk in the park. But, baby, I got the grades.
A student without arms and wearing a sweater-vest sits in a dark, crowded lecture hall. In unison, the students around her pull out their Mac computers. All the students open their laptops at the same time.
Student without arms: [SINGING] Don’t wanna be admired. I’m not your inspiration.
The student without arms opens her laptop with her bare feet, then types with her toes. Elsewhere in the lecture hall, a student wearing many rings on her fingers types on her Mac. An iPhone is mounted atop her Mac, its front lenses pointed to the front of the hall. In unison, the students in the hall stop typing and raise their hands from their Mac computers. Their fingers spread before them, signing “inspired” in ASL, then return to the keyboards.
Student wearing rings: [SINGING] If you wanna be inspired, there’s a library down the hall.
The student wearing rings points away with her thumb. In the Magnifier app on Mac, an image of the chalkboard at the front of the lecture hall appears. She zooms in on the image, enlarging the handwritten text.
[WHISTLE BLOWING]
In a gymnasium, the blind student with long blond hair sits on bleachers. Before her, athletes jog across the floor. One dribbles a basketball.
Blind student with long blond hair: [SINGING] Have you noticed admiration sometimes smells a bit like pity?
A basketball player with one arm starts a Basketball workout with AssistiveTouch on her Apple?Watch by making a fist and releasing it.
[START WORKOUT CHIME]
Student athletes play basketball. The basketball player with one arm shoots a basketball. She punches the air in frustration, and her long red hair waves across her shoulders.
Basketball player with one arm: [SINGING] I can be strong. I get stuff wrong. [GROANS] And I don’t always talk so pretty.
In a lab, students in white lab coats move in choreographed gestures. A blind student in a lab coat uses a refreshable braille display attached to an iPad.
Blind student in a lab coat: [SINGING] I’m not remarkable. Not heroic or brave.
Using Braille Access, he types out a mathematical equation.
Blind student in a lab coat: [SINGING] I’ve got no superpowers. I can’t even do this stupid equation!
The students in the lab shake their heads, pull their hair, and toss paper into the air.
[SCREAMING]
[PAPER RUSTLING]
In an art studio, the student without arms and wearing a sweater-vest grabs an Apple?Pencil with her toes. Holding the Apple?Pencil with her toes, she draws on an iPad propped on an easel.
Student without arms: [SINGING] I’m not remarkable. And neither are you.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] And neither are you!
A nude model, partially obscured by a potted plant, poses in the center of the art studio. He faces away from the student without arms. Students in the room lean over their easels to look at him.
Student without arms: [SINGING] We all have toes.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] How weird are toes!
Student without arms: [SINGING] We all look funny in the nude.
In the AssistiveTouch menu, the student without arms taps Pinch, then drags a point on her iPad to zoom out. A sketch of the nude model appears on her iPad. Outside a dorm at night, two students look?up.
Student outside: [YELLING] Sophia!
Student ensemble: [SINGING] I’ve got a face. I’ve got a place. I’ve got a life. I’ve got a name.
Upstairs in the dorm, a deaf student dances in place at a desk and signs the lyrics in ASL. Her image is reflected in a mirror.
Student outside: [YELLING] Sophia!
On the deaf student’s iPhone, a Name Recognition alert appears.
[BUZZING]
Her screen reads, “Name Recognition recognized a sound that may be Sophia.” Now at the window, the deaf student waves to her friends below. In a locker room, students surround the student wearing glasses and using a motorized wheelchair. Beside him, one student wears a mascot costume and another holds a trophy. The student using the motorized wheelchair sweeps his hands to the beat of the song.
Student using motorized wheelchair: [SINGING] And I need stuff. And you need stuff. And all our stuff is not the same.
The students form a tunnel with items in their hands: a skateboard, cymbals, a tennis racket, a Mac, a helmet, and pom-poms. At the end of the tunnel, a student sits on a bench and extends his prosthetic leg with a sneaker. In a library, a student with a mustache uses Magnifier on his Mac to read a book on a table. He uses Accessibility Reader to turn the book image into readable text, then changes the background from gray to yellow. The text sharpens. Across the table from him, a student in a backward baseball cap rests his head on his hand.
Student with cap: [SINGING] And some days, I get so tired.
Student with mustache: [SINGING] She gets grumpy.
Student with cap: [SINGING] He gets bossy.
Blind student with long blond hair: [SINGING] Yeah, well, I have a special need. I call it(…) “coffee.”
The blind student with long blond hair wears AirPods?Max around her neck. She shrugs, then extends her hand. Another student places a cup of coffee in her hand. Now, all the students in the library hold coffee cups and bounce energetically in their seats.
[RATTLING]
[PIANO INTERLUDE]
In a sunny classroom, the deaf student from the dorm uses Live Captions on an iPad. The screen reads, “Listening…” A blind student plays piano. His reflection appears on the sleek, black instrument. A white cane rests against the piano. Light from a window beside him pools on the piano. The blind student rocks to the melody.
Pianist: [SINGING] Do I have to be remarkable? I’m just having a try. I’m not fragile or indestructible. And, like everyone, I sometimes cry.
[MUSIC INTENSIFIES]
Pianist and student ensemble: [SINGING] And I’m not like the rest. But then the rest of you aren’t like the rest either.
Behind the pianist, dancers perform: A dancer with one leg using a forearm crutch does a pirouette; a dancer with long blond hair twirls; a dancer in a turtleneck and using a wheelchair spins. Students observe the performances from seats. One student uses Live Captions on their iPad, and lyrics appear in time to the music. The dancer with one leg leaps into the air and taps their foot with their hand. Now, at a house party, a student in a jean jacket dips a student in a silver-collared shirt using a motorized wheelchair.
Student in silver-collared shirt: [SINGING] I’m not a saint. I’m not a sinner.
She clings to the other student’s neck, then pulls him in for a kiss. A crowd dances around them. A student with limb differences and wearing a beanie and glasses tosses a ping-pong ball across a table. It bounces away from arranged plastic cups.
Student with limb differences: [SINGING] I’m not a loser. I’m not a winner.
The students around him raise their hands in the air and shout. The student wearing rings dances with a group on a staircase. A student without forearms with his hair in braids plays a drum to the beat using drumsticks attached to his upper arms.
Student wearing rings: [SINGING] I’m not more and I’m not less(…) I’m just your average human mess!
Using an iPhone, a student adjusts the volume of the Hearing Aid feature on their AirPods?Pro.
[CHEERING AND CHANTING INCREASE IN VOLUME]
Confetti falls in the house party. Students jump up and down and bob their heads. The next morning, the students, asleep in a pile, wake in a daze. The student with limb differences sits up, his glasses now crooked.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] I’m not remarkable.
Student with limb differences: [SINGING] And neither are you.
The student with four fingers on each hand dances a choreographed dance in a group. They point forward, step from side to side in a wide stance, then halo their arms and slap their thighs.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] I’m not remarkable.
Student with four fingers: [SINGING] And neither are you!
Student ensemble: [SINGING] Neither am I!
A row of students sits in a columned walkway. In unison, they each kick out a leg.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] We’ve all got toes.
A student at the end of the row raises her prosthetic leg and a cheetah-print sandal.
Student with a prosthetic leg: Hold on, I don’t(…)
Student ensemble: [SINGING] We all look gorgeous in the nude.
A student without hands and legs poses for a selfie with friends.
Student without hands and legs: Tap Take Picture.
[CAMERA SHUTTER]
Student ensemble: [SINGING] I’ve got a face. I’ve got a place. I’ve got a life. I’ve got a name.
Now outside, before a large brick building, the student with a blond bob and septum piercing dances in a group of students wearing blue graduation caps and gowns. All together, they sign the lyrics in ASL.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] And I need stuff. And you need stuff. And all our stuff is not the same.
Dancing students dash before them to the plaza. The dancer with one leg leaps into the air. A student dances across the plaza, waving a Mac. Three students skip into the air. Beside them, a marching band plays. Students using wheelchairs dance at the front.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] And we will strive. And we will fail. And we’ll get hurt. But we’ll prevail.
A montage plays. The student with a blond bob and the deaf student from the dorm sign the lyrics in ASL and dance. The drummer without forearms, now in a marching band uniform, taps his drumsticks on a drum.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] And it’ll be joyous. And it’ll suck. And I’ll be lonely. And I’ll be loved.
The blind pianist continues to play. The student wearing rings laughs in the lecture hall. The drummer dances at the house party, his drumsticks raised in the air.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] And on the way, we will discover we’re not the same, but we’re not the other. There’s a life out there that I refuse to miss.
The student in the locker room using a motorized wheelchair clenches his fists and mouths the lyrics. Back in the plaza, all the students dance together.
Student ensemble: [SINGING] I’m only remarkable because everybody is.
The students pose. Students throw basketballs in the air, then catch them.
[CHEERING]
The students smile, then disperse.
[CLATTERING]
Titles: Designed for every student.
The Apple logo.
Til-gjengelig-hetsfunk-sjoner i klasse-rommet. Og utenfor.
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Lupe
En digital lupe som zoomer inn p?, regi-strerer og beskriver objekter rundt?deg.

Lupe
Blinde og svak-synte som vil ha mer informa-sjon om de fysiske om-givelsene sine, kan bruke Registrerings-modus i?Lupe. Ved hjelp av maskin-l?ring p? enheten kan Registrerings-modus skanne om-givelsene og gi beskrivelser av det som regi-streres i kamera-visning-en. Lupe identi-fiserer tekst i kamera-visning-en med Tekstgjen-kjenning, og du kan til og med peke p? tekst og f? den lest opp med Pek?og?snakk.1 Dette kan v?re nyttig n?r du skal bruke objekter som har tekst-felter, for eksempel en digital skjerm som brukes til selvbetjening, eller inn-stillinger, knapper og tastaturer p? husholdnings-apparater.
Registrerings-modus p? iPhone- og iPad-modeller med LiDAR-skanner inklu-derer intelligente verk-t?y som regi-strerer mennesker, d?rer og m?bler i n?r-heten og gir deg beskjed ved hjelp av lyder og andre tilbake-meldinger.2 P? iPhone kan du bruke Registrerings-modus med handlings-knappen for ? f? en beskrivelse av om-givelsene.3
Funksjoner kan bli endret. Enkelte funk-sjoner, apper og tjenester er kanskje ikke til-gjeng-elige i alle regioner eller for alle spr?k. Se iOS og iPadOS for til-gjeng-elige scener i Registrerings-modus. Se iOS og iPadOS for hva som er til-gjeng-elig med Tekstgjen-kjenning.
Med Lesermodus integreres Til-gjengelig-hetsleser med Lupe, slik at du kan samhandle s?ml?st med tekst i den virke-lige verden, for eksempel i b?ker eller p? menyer.4 Du kan ta et midlertidig bilde av teksten og justere fonten, font-st?r-relsen og tekst-fargen slik du vil ha den. Du kan ogs? f? hjelp til ??finne riktig utsnitt og justere perspektivet f?r du viser teksten i Lesermodus. H?rbare hint veileder deg til du har f?tt hele dokumentet innenfor kameraets synsfelt. Lesermodus kan brukes med innhold som leses opp, slik at du kan f?lge med p? teksten n?r den leses. -

Til-gjengelig-hetsleser
Tilpass tekst for ? f? en mer behagelig og fokusert lese-opplevelse.

Til-gjengelig-hetsleser
Til-gjengelig-hetsleser er en ny lesefunksjon som kan brukes p? tvers av syst-emet. Den ble utviklet for ? gj?re tekst lettere ? lese for personer med ulike funksjons-nedsettelser, som dysleksi og nedsatt syn. Til-gjengelig-hetsleser kan brukes til ? til-passe lange tekster og fokusere p? innhold du vil lese, med en rekke alternativer for font, farge og avstand samt inne-bygde lyd-kontroller som kan?lese opp tekst mens du f?lger med. Til-gjengelig-hetsleser kan brukes i alle apper og er inne-bygd i Lupe-appen til iOS, iPadOS og macOS, slik at du bruke den s?ml?st p? tekster i om-givelsene dine, som b?ker eller menyer. -

Tilgang til punkt-skrift
Ta notater, ?pne apper og f? teksting i sanntid med punkt-skrift.

Tilgang til punkt-skrift
Tilgang til punkt-skrift er en helt ny funksjon som gj?r iPhone, iPad og Mac om til fullverdige notatverk-t?y for punkt-skrift, som er dypt integrert i Apple-?kosyst-emet. Med en inne-bygd appstarter kan du enkelt ?pne hvilken som helst app ved ? skrive med en tilkoblet punkt-skriftenhet. Du kan ta raske notater i punkt-skrift og gj?re utregninger med Nemeth eller UEB Math, to punkt-skriftkoder som ofte brukes i under-visning i matematikk- og naturfag.
Du kan ogs? ?pne BRF-filer (Braille Ready Format) direkte med Tilgang til punkt-skrift, noe som gir deg tilgang til b?ker og filer som har blitt opprettet p? et notatverk-t?y for punkt-skrift.
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VoiceOver
En skjerm-leser som beskriver alt p? skjerm-en, inklu-dert punkt-skrift.

VoiceOver
Du kan ogs? koble til en leselist via Bluetooth og bruke den til ? navi-gere p? Apple-enheten. Les og skriv med forkortet eller fullstendig punkt-skrift, og skriv inn punkt-skrift direkte p? ber?rings-skjermen ved hjelp av Punktskrift p? skjerm. VoiceOver st?tter mange internasjonale punkt-skrifttabeller. N?r du kommun-i-serer eller sam-arbeider med personer med normalt syn, kan du sl? p? leselistpanelet for ? vise en over-settelse av punkt-skriften p? skjerm-en. Apple-enheter har ogs? st?tte for leselister med flere linjer. Med over 70 leselister som er kompa-tible med iOS og iPadOS, og over 100 med macOS, kan du finne frem til en bruk av punkt-skrift som passer akkurat for?deg.Sett opp?VoiceOver og punkt-skrift?p?:
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Lyd-gjenkjenning
Lytter etter bestemte lyder og varsler deg n?r de regi-streres.

Lyd-gjenkjenning
Lyd-gjenkjenning lytter etter bestemte lyder og bruker intelli-gens p? enheten til ? varsle deg n?r de regi-streres. Funksjonen gjen-kjenner 15 forskjell-ige lyder, blant annet unike elektroniske lyder i om-givelsene dine, som pipelydene fra kj?kken-apparater, alarmer og ringeklokker.6 -

H?rselshelse
AirPods?Pro har en H?reapparat-funksjon p? klinisk?niv?.

H?rselshelse
AirPods?Pro byr p? en komplett opp-levelse for h?rselshelsen, med H?rselstest, en H?reapparat-funksjon p? klinisk niv? og aktivt H?rselsvern.7
Ta en vitenskapelig godkjent h?rselstest i ditt eget hjem p? bare fem?minutter ved ? sammenkoble AirPods?Pro med en iPhone eller iPad.7 Du f?r resultater som er enkle ? forst?, og innsikt i h?rselen din. H?reapparat-funk-sjonen p? klinisk niv? kan hjelpe dem som opp-lever mildt til moderat h?rselstap.7 Den foretar justeringer som forbedrer klarheten til stemmer og lyder rundt deg. Du kan ogs? til-passe inn-stillinger som forsterking, balanse og tone slik det passer deg. AirPods?Pro har dessuten aktivt H?rselsvern p? tvers av lyttemoduser for ??beskytte deg mot st?y fra om-givelsene.8
Konfigurer h?rselshelse?p?:
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AssistiveTouch
Tilpass hvordan du bruker ber?rings-skjermen.

AssistiveTouch
Kombiner sm? beveg-elser og effektiv multi-tasking ved hjelp av Hurtighand-ling-er for Apple?Watch. Du kan gj?re enda mer med Apple?Watch uten ? r?re skjerm-en. Dobbelttrykk med h?nden for enkelt ? besvare anrop, ta et bilde, sette musikk p? pause, fortsette trenings-?kter og mye mer. Du kan ogs? dempe inn-kommende anrop, sl? av nedtellinger og avvise varslinger ved ? vri h?nd-leddet utover.10 Du kan finne og aktivere Hurtighand-ling-er i Til-gjengelig-het-inn-stil-lingene p? Apple?Watch.11Sett opp Hurtighand-ling-er for Apple?Watch?p?:
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Talekontroll
Naviger p? enheten din via talekommandoer.

Talekontroll
Naviger med stemmen. Med kommandoer som klikk, sveip og trykk kan du enkelt bruke favoritt-appene dine. Du kan merke, flytte og zoome presist ved ? vise tall langs objekter du kan klikke p?, eller ved ? vise et rute-nett p? skjerm-en. Med Talekontroll kan du ogs? skrive og redigere p? en mer effektiv m?te. Med Stavemodus for Talekontroll kan du diktere navn, adresser og u-vanlige stavem?ter. Bokstav for bokstav.12 Dette er en lettvint og s?ml?s m?te ? gj?re rettinger og formatendringer p? – og ??bytte mellom tekstdikt-ering og kommandoer.13 Hvis du oppretter og arkiverer til-passet vokabular for Talekontroll, vil det auto-matisk overf?res til alle enhetene dine. Og hvis du aldri har brukt Talekontroll f?r p? iPhone, iPad eller Mac, kan en integrert introduksjon med oppl?ringsst?tte hjelpe deg ? beherske alle de ulike funk-sjonene kjapt og enkelt. I tillegg er Talekontroll kompa-tibel med CarPlay, s? du kan styre den inne-bygde skjerm-en i bilen med talekommandoer. Programvare-utviklere med begrenset mobilitet kan bruke Swift-modus til ? diktere kode i Xcode.
Funksjoner kan bli endret. Enkelte funk-sjoner, apper og tjenester er kanskje ikke til-gjeng-elige i alle regioner eller for alle spr?k. Se iOS og iPadOS eller macOS for til-gjeng-elige funk-sjoner.