What I miss most about iOS, and why I’m still not going back

By Holy Diver, 1 June, 2023

Forum
Android

Coke vs pepsi, chocolate vs vanilla, iOS vs android. We all know the debates and, for the most part, we’ve all picked a side. That doesn’t mean we’re all mindless droids or zombie fruit fiends, however, so I wanted to share my favorite things about the other side along with my reasons for giving them up. I’ve switched back and forth a couple times now and, while I’m not ruling out another flip at some point, I find myself much more on team android for now. Still, I have fond memories, many frustrations, and maybe I can shed some light for anyone who is just curious or considering your options. We all have choices and there isn’t one right answer for everyone. So, in the interest of playing fair, here’s what I regret most about mine and why I’m glad I made it anyhow.

I Miss iMessages

You know those massive group texts where you can all see each others’ reactions, can send voice messages that sound great and show off your great photos and videos to all the people with a single tap? Do you have that one family member or friend who’s always making your text conversations blow up with a notification for every single emoji reaction because they’re using regular text? It’s annoying. Even with google’s recent updates to make it slightly less awkward. There are workarounds, I can use Samsung quick share or google photos to share things, but that’s so much more cumbersome and time consuming for me and my friends. It doesn’t get any better with face time, though at least I can get invited to a call and use a web browser now. Apple built a sleek, easy solution here and it’s beautiful. I’m reminded how nice it is every time I’m stuck using one of google’s few stock message reactions … not a big deal each time but believe me it adds up to some frustration when it happens multiple times a week. Thanks apple. Oh, and if you’re switching from iPhone to android, please for the love of everything holy turn off iMessages in your apple account before you give up that shiny fruit phone! Just do it, you’ll thank me later.

Messages for Web

Call me old school but there’s nothing quite so satisfying, , or efficient, as a good old Qwerty keyboard for texting. Braille screen input is a good enough workaround on the go but, for typing fast and accurately, nothing beats the tried and true keyboard. If you’re an iPhone user with a windows computer this isn’t an option, unless you want to carry yet another device around and deal with a sometimes janky Bluetooth connection. Those of you with MACS often tell me how nice it is to get a text on your phone and reply on your MacBook. With google’s Messages for Web I have that same luxury, on all my devices, all it takes is scanning a QR code on my phone camera and I’m good to go. If I’m out and about with my chromebook I can use that. If I’m working on my windows machine and want to respond to someone without interrupting my routine to grab my phone it’s just an open tab away, no pocket rummaging or phone unlocking necessary. This may not matter to everybody but it sure makes my life easier.

iOS has better Braille support, especially for reading

I swear by Braille, the difference between listening to a thing and reading it is, for me, life changing. It’s no secret Apple got to Braille first, more Braille displays work over Bluetooth with iOS and for the most part the experience is better. Android Braille has come a long way, it mostly does what I need it to (more on that in a minute) but so far IOS Braille support is much more powerful and, ironically, customizable.

On iOS I can use the voiceover gesture commander to create pretty much whatever Braille commands I want. I can jump to the next level 4 heading on a web site with a custom shortcut, make a keystroke to navigate by row or column in a table etc. I also know right away when there’s a swipe down action, which again I can easily emulate from the display, without having to guess if that’s available for whatever item has focus on the screen. It’s powerful, easily configurable and I really do miss that.

IOS also, as of now, wipes the floor with android in terms of reading Braille books on your phone. Do you live in the states and use the Bard Mobile app? How about iBooks? They work, it’s relatively straightforward, you just might need to switch your Braille table to Computer Braille depending on the app you’re using to read … Looking at you, Bard Mobile. On my android phone all the braille books in that Bard app might as well be Greek or Javascript, though I’ve heard that’s likely changing soon. Perhaps more frustrating google play books and books from the Kindle store either won’t read at all or else the focus moves around so much they might as well be unreadable. Luckily my qBraille can store and read bookshare and Bard offerings without my phone or else I’d really be up the proverbial creek.

Android Braille is much better for writing

Yes, android Braille actually gets a win and not a small one. Anybody who’s used Braille on iOS for serious writing work doubtless knows just how frustrating it is to have the cursor move to a totally different place in the document, sometimes without even showing you this on the display. It’s a serious glitch in otherwise solid iPhone Braille support and, given that it’s been a problem for years without any resolution, I’m betting it always will be. So, with all its limitations, I actually prefer Braille on android just because I can write with the peace of mind that my cursor will stay put. I can actually draft papers, longer e-mails and the like without having to use the terminal clipboard or a purpose built app like Voice Dream writer. For me that makes the reading difficulties worth it, though it wouldn’t if my display had no on board storage.

Blindness specific apps are better on the iPhone

It’s no secret that most developers in our small community focus more on iOS and only get around to android as an afterthought, if they get around to it at all. Financially this makes sense, especially in America. There are very few blind people actually paying for these specialized apps and almost all of those people have been on the Apple side of the fence for years. I love NFB newsline and it has a great iOS app, no such luck on android. I really want to try the BE My Eyes virtual volunteer but the waiting list didn’t even open up on android for almost a month after iPhone users got the chance to register. The oko app for detecting when street lights change is not on the play store, promises notwithstanding, and I’m doubtful it ever will be. Goodmaps on android is at best a mess, at worst totally unusable unless you like your GPS giving you wildly inaccurate information about things several blocks away from where you actually are. If you like Blindsquare or Seeing AI, they aren’t even on android. While I find Google Lookout generally works as well or better than Seeing AI I do miss some of the extra features, like the indoor navigation with breadcrumbs. IN short, android users are second class citizens in the blindness app world and that’s not changing any time soon.

Most apps on android are more accessible by default

Do you like turning on and off screen detection in the telegram app? How about the voiceover bugs with facebook that inevitably crop up with major app updates? Did your Uber app ever break after getting auto updated from the app store? For reasons too technical to go much into here, mostly talkback requiring less optimizations than voiceover on the app developer side, I rarely have this problem. It’s true I don’t have screen detection but I also rarely need it… and, for the odd app where that would come in handy I can at least get sighted help to label the inaccessible icons and I never have to worry about that app again. In my three years on android I don’t think I’ve ever had an update from the play store break accessibility in any app and I can’t say the same about iOS. Maybe that tradeoff isn’t worth it for you but I definitely chose the less frustrating pain for myself.

Voiceover works better for flicking through the screen

Believe it or not, voiceover doesn’t usually show you exactly what’s on the screen. In the youtube app, for example, the options by every video to go to channel and open the menu to share, save to playlist etc are only accessible with a one finger swipe down. For sighted iPhone users all of those options are on the screen but apple decided to minimize the number of swipes required with voiceover. While this can make it more efficient if you only swipe through your screen it also makes life a little harder for app developers and, more to the point, doesn’t actually show you how everything’s laid out. This is good and bad depending on your philosophy and use case but my experience providing tech support for sighted and blind users alike really made me appreciate google’s approach here. I can walk my sighted girlfriend through an app we both use with confidence that we’re actually looking at the same thing in the same way and, when I google a tutorial for an app, I can just follow it without any modifications. Still, I do sometimes miss Apple’s more streamlined approach. I don’t think there’s only one right strategy for everyone here, pick what matters more to you.

The good side of apple optimization

Lastly, Apple makes it easier to just buy a phone and be confident accessibility will just work the way it’s supposed to. All new I devices run the same software, go through the same testing process, and voiceover is basically the same whichever flavor of fruit you end up buying. You can get your phone and be pretty confident it will mostly work like every other iPhone you’ve ever used. While android has made progress here the fragmentation between manufacturers means you really have to do more research to find your ideal fit. Get a google phone and you run the best version of talkback, with worse hardware. Get a Samsung phone and your talkback will always be about a year out of date unless you know how to get google’s version on your phone with the ADB terminal. Get a Xiaomi or Oneplus and there’s really no telling how accessibility works before you actually use the darn thing. It’s more of an open market and with that comes fragmentation and less controlled accessibility. You’ll never have that problem with Apple.

The good side of fragmentation

Do you miss a headphone jack on your phone? Do you want the chance to run multiple screen readers for redundancy, like you can on Windows? Do you want to use TTS from anywhere other than Apple? With android you have all those options precisely because things aren’t optimized like Apple. On my phone I have two versions of talkback, one with the latest features and one that’s designed for Samsung’s software, and I can switch between them in less time than it takes to turn off Jaws and activate NVDA. If you’re comfortable with less secure software you can use Commentary screen reader, which gives many more features and customization than talkback, then switch back to talkback with a simple volume key shortcut. More choices, more risk, more potential to break things or make them better for you. The choice, as always, is yours.

Options

Comments

By Justin Harris on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 - 14:53

The Chuwi tablet has great build quality. Feels so much like an iPad pro it's not even funny. But, while it does handle multiple finger gestures, apparently not enough for the Braille keyboard. Rather annoying! But, it's mostly a media consumption device to not drain my phone battery so fast. Can I just watch stuff on my fire stick? Why yes, but sometimes it's nice to have something else laying around. But typing on the thing was a pain getting it all set up. It was under $100 so I guess you really do get what you pay for. It seems snappy and responsive enough, but knowing now that the Braille keyboard wasn't going to work, I may not have gone through with it. But I will still keep around. Still works good enough for youtube and mindless scrolling on facebook. lol

By Holy Diver on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 - 14:53

Live and learn right? I have two very cheap android tablets that the Biden administration handed out with their affordable connectivity thing, one of which a friend wanted me to train them on as like an entry into android and they don't have any multifinger gesture support, none whatsoever. Well, I take that back the slightly newer one maybe did but still, I've no idea what I'll do with them now. How are you finding the s22 ultra, and android in general, so far?

By Brad on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 - 14:53

Or sell them but you're probably better off just given them to a charity shop.

By OldBear on Tuesday, April 2, 2024 - 14:53

How do these low-end, Android devices do with regular bluetooth keyboards? Might be a way to use them. I have an old, Amazon Fire tablet just for watching Prime videos and reading a few books, but that has their own spin on the screen reader. If the keyboard commands aren't too whacked out and cumbersome, I could see turning a cheap Android into a single use device.

By Joshua on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

There are talkback keyboard commands, to view them go to talkback settings then advanst settings then the option is there

I don’t know why google put them there but it’s where they are

By OldBear on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

I will make note of that.
Looks like there are ways to set up Android to be locked to one app, assuming any of those ways are accessible.
What I had in mind is there was a discussion here of stand-alone talking tech. I have a few off-the-shelf, bluetooth devices, and even a couple of blind tech apps, that could be set up as stand-alone devices, if the tablet end of things is cheap enough. Having almost everything accessibility related dependent and entangled with a fragile and expensive iPhone bothers me in the back of my mind. If you can pair a cheap, bluetooth keyboard--heck, use a wired keyboard--to a cheap tablet and get around limitations from not having multi-finger gestures, you could set up something like a calculator to receive and speak caliper readings, and not worry about it getting scratched up out in the concrete wilderness. I use Linux, so not having a touch screen is fine, if the key commands are good.

By Holy Diver on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

That's really creative Old Bear, no reason it shouldn't work in theory. I wonder if these methods you're talking about require root access?

By OldBear on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

**I guess I didn't read down in the article enough. LOL Yes it does and I don't think that would be accessible. You could, however just have the app you want as the only app showing to be tapped on to achieve the same thing, like what ever you call the home screen in Android.
Never mind:
It sounds like it's part of the Android settings. Here's the article I read:
https://www.42gears.com/blog/single-application-mode/
I also saw something about an app that will do it, but I didn't look into it.

By Joshua on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

Samsung calls this pin app, to turn it on go to settings and sertch for pin app and turn it on, after doing this go to recent apps, tap the icon above the app and tap pin app, a message will come up explaining how to get out of the app, tap ok and your done

By OldBear on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

Thanks. I was probably thinking of that from the Google search I was looking through, and got it mixed up.
Would you need any multi-finger gestures to start up the screen reader and connect a keyboard?

By Holy Diver on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

All of the old angle gestures still exist so yeah it should work. This is really cool, I've skimmed past it in my settings and never given it much thought.

By Justin Harris on Tuesday, April 9, 2024 - 14:53

The Galaxy has been amazing. I'm quite happy with it. Also the tablet is working okay so far. Quite happy to have made the switch.

By Joshua on Tuesday, April 16, 2024 - 14:53

Hid braille display support is finally hear in android 15 beta 1

Hopefully it will be included in talkback 15 when that is released

By Holy Diver on Tuesday, April 16, 2024 - 14:53

Yeah I’ve heard it was in the works, I’m cautiously optimistic but I think a lot will come down to the individual braille display companies, humanware in particular. Probably the displays will have to be updated too.

By Joshua on Tuesday, April 16, 2024 - 14:53

Yeah probly but we will see

By Holy Diver on Tuesday, April 16, 2024 - 14:53

Imagine all the bad PR if google rolls this out and people start calling Humanware because their displays won’t work still. I don’t think even Jonathan Mosen could spin that one to Humanware’s advantage.

By Joshua on Tuesday, April 16, 2024 - 14:53

That would not be good