Category: Cell Phone Talk
I currently have an htc my touch with mobile accessibility as the screenreader.
I have no idea how to use the virtual keyboard.
Can anybody help me?
:) yes I can, you and I have the same phone, so here goes how to use the keyboard. Well First off, your mobile accessibility screen reader not the apps need to bee turn on under the android accessibility settings. Assuming this has been done, time to set mobile accessibility's keyboard as your default keyboard. 1. scroll down to settings in mobile accessibility and press your track pad’s selector, with your phone and mine you just press down on the track pad it simulates a click. 2. scrol down with your track pad to text input and press down on your track pad to select text in put option. 2. Scrol down to virtual keyboard press selector on this option, then scroll down to advance. next, it’s going to give you a screen that says system input, press slecter on system input then scrol down to moble accessibility and select that keyboard. Okay, in the mobile accessibility sweet you need to hold volume up to open up the mobile accessibility keyboard. When your out side of the sweet hold up your volume button until mobile accessibility says "keyboard open". Now you can just slide your hand around until you hear the letters then lift up your finger. To change your keyboard to upper case, numarickeyboard and simples you can either hold down the shit key on the virtual keyboard or use the volume down button to cycle through the different keyboards.
Let me correct one more thing here, when your out of the mobile accessibility sweet, hold down your menu key until the keyboard says open. To close the keyboard just repeat the same step you used to open the keyboard out of moble accessibility. "hold menu key for a second"
does the mobile accessibility keyboard have any advantages over the eyes free keyboard? And is it possible to navigate a touch screen phone using the mobile accessibility keyboard?
moble accessibility's keyboard seems to be esier to edit and review by sentence, character and word. It does not have a d-pad feature yet not sure when that is coming. However, the eye's free keyboard does have a d=pad as you know mat and some reviewing of what you wrote can be reviewed. So is all about choice what fits the usser. I happen to like mobile accessibility's keyboard because it feels very fluant when I type I can compare it to moble speak's keyboard it was fluant and I could access special charactes if I needed o nthe fly.
Um... ugg, if I could people I would have rewrote the post above this, I was using a blue tooth keyboard with my phone.