
So what are we going to be touching on? As I said earlier, we're going to be touching on the Voiceover gestures. That 15-minute mark is a good place to stop, grab a snack, grab a cup of tea, take a break, let your brain absorb what you've observed so far, and then you can come back to it later on without having to pause the video (or audio in this case) and lose your place.So this, obviously, as the introduction is a little bit shorter than the others and just really a summary. You can customize that as you see fit.So for those who have listened to my tutorials before, you'll know that I like to keep them about 15 minutes because for me, at least, 15 minutes is a good length, you know? At 15 minutes, you start to lose interest. Purely personal to me, yours might be a bit different, but nothing too much to worry about.

I'll focus on the touchscreen which all the devices have, and then any other information that we pick up such as the order of my home screen, for example. Again, it's nothing particularly critical.We're going to be working with Voiceover gestures. And certainly on different models of iPhone (obviously on the later models of the iPhone), you have the face recognition rather than the fingerprint, and the home button has obviously shifted to a different location. I Pads are a little bit bigger, there is a little more screen space which gives a little bit of a different layout, and things like that. These aren't really gestures that are likely to go out of date any time soon, so hopefully this tutorial will age nicely.There will be some very slight differences between iPads and iPhones for obvious reasons. This was recorded using an iPhone SE 2020 (which was purchased last year) using iOS 14.3, but again, the gestures haven't really changed. They haven't really changed since iOS 7, the good old days of the single-digit iOS. It is the "I" operating system, so you'll find it on devices such as iPhones, iPads, things like that.The gestures we're going to be talking about are pretty global. We are literally just going to talk about what devices we'll be working with and what you can kind of expect.So iOS is the operating system used on Apple devices, which sounds very posh, but the clue is in the name, really "iOS". This is the introduction tutorial, so we're not actually going to be touching on the devices or any gestures, things like that. My name is Nathan Smith of Nathan Tech, and these are the iOS tutorials. Nathan: Hello there, ladies and gentlemen. Sorry, your browser doesn't support this format. Let me tell you what we're going to be doing and introduce myself:

Single tap: Pause and resume VoiceOver speech.Swipe down: Scroll through menus or decrease a number in a selection.

#VOICE OVER SCREEN CURTAIN IPHONE FULL#
This is the full list of gestures we use throughout the tutorials: voiceOver tutorials by Perkins E-Learning:.VoiceOver is the advanced Screen Reading solution made by apple for their devices.Īvailable on all IOS devices, VoiceOver gives visually impaired people access to the touch screen with simple yet customisable gestures.įirst up are some external links that I mention towards the end of the tutorials:
