A site describing which mobile phones are available with large text/font size settings, how to adjust text size, and other features for those of us with poor eye sight.

Welcome!

With so many handsets flying onto the market, it’s about time someone made a resource to show which are best for those of us who do not have 20/20 vision.

The mobile industry seems to be completely clueless, and while things are improving, they are doing so waaaayyy toooo slowly. Five years ago Nokia had the audacity to reply to one of my emails and suggest I ask my friends to text me in caps lock to help me see. I recently spent hours in local phone shop trying to find a handset that could display large text without costing the earth. In all four of the shops I tried the staff didn’t have a clue how to help. They brought out tantalising handset after tantalising handset, most of which had absolutely no adjustable font size settings.

So, hopefully here you will be able to find two things. Firstly, an update on which phones have decent size settings, and secondly it would be good if we could apply a little pressure on the mobile industry, afterall there are thousands of us with less than perfect vision, and it would be so easy for them to make every phone accessible.

It is worth pointing out that these phones will be usable for people with poor eyesight and possibly people with a visual impairment at the less severe end of the spectrum. If your sight is bad enough to require speaking phones then the RNIB have some excellent factsheets here.

Friday 26 March 2010

Review Blackberry Curve 8520

Note: Whilst this is a review of the Curve 8520, I am under the impression most Blackberrys have similar accessability features.

Pros:
Adjustable font size up to size 14, colour scheme options (inverted, greyscale)

Cons:
Tiny lettering on the tiny keys, (I guess you could learn which keys are which) Small print when browsing the internet, setting up email and with certain apps.

Verdict:
Definitely an option for those of us with poor eyesight.

How to change font size:
Go to the main menu> Options > Screen/Keyboard > Font Size

How to change accessibility features:
Main menu > Options > Advanced Options > Accessibility

Full Review

Apparently all Blackberrys have pretty impressive customisable font size, which can make the text pretty large. It is also possible to invert the colours so as to read white text on a black background. The downside of this is that your homescreen (Blackberry jargon for ‘desktop’) looks very strange with an inverted photo. I found a neat way round this, simply edit an image on your computer so that its colours are inverted, then email it across to the phone. When you invert the colours on your phone the image will look normal again.

In terms of general usability, the Blackberry Curve 8520 keys are rather small. I got used to this quickly, however did find it tough to read the lettering on them. Eventually I think I will get the hand of where each key is and what it does. So while this may be a drag at first, the problem will eventually be overcome.

Setting the text to a large size 14 and inverting the colours made sending and receiving texts and emails a walk in the park (I have approximately 1/3 average vision). It also changes the size for all the menus and option screens.

I did find it frustrating at times that the phone would display tiny text when changing settings, for example when setting up email accounts. Similaly some of the applications you can download onto the phone have tiny text, and browsing the internet takes a lot of zooming to become manageable, and even then it is only just doable. A no brainer solution for blackberry would be to make it possible to configure the email accounts through your computer using the supplied USB cable. Similarly it would be an improvement to be able to set the accessibility settings and text size in the same way.

However, all in all this is definitely a usable phone for those with poor vision, and the Blackberry has an extremely impressive array of features including an organiser and support for multiple email accounts.

1 comment:

  1. thank you for making this site. i have a hard time finding a phone for my father, with easy large buttons, text, and no volume buttons which make the ringer turn off when bumped in the pocket. keep up the good work

    ReplyDelete