New accessibility enhancements for Office Online

When we first built Office Online, we worked hard to make the suite accessible to blind and low vision users by using a new web accessibility standard called WAI-ARIA. While this web standard has allowed Office Online to be usable with a screen reader, we’ve made some further improvements over the past year to provide an even better experience. We are excited to talk about these improvements and have you try them out.

Location and formatting information

Moving around in a document with just text has been straightforward. Now with Narrator enabled, you will hear formatting information read out loud when you use the arrow keys to navigate in a document. Narrator will announce information about lists, tables, headings, and more.

The following video demonstrates the accessibility enhancement for document formatting:

[video=youtube;K67Z_3CcAAc]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K67Z_3CcAAc[/video]

To enable Narrator, press the Windows Key + Enter.

Reading without moving the cursor through the document

Over the next month, we will roll out support for virtual reading for documents of up to three pages in Word Online and OneNote Online. If you’re not familiar with virtual reading, it’s a concept that most screen readers have that allows you to have text read out loud, without having to move your cursor. Narrator has a shortcut called “Start Reading” (Caps Lock + M), which reads the rest of the document based on your current location.

The following video demonstrates the accessibility enhancement for virtual reading:

[video=youtube;-aKGzvQq-8c]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-aKGzvQq-8c[/video]

This shortcut works when using Word Online and OneNote Online. If you’re using JAWS, be sure to turn on Virtual Cursor (Insert + Z) to start using these capabilities. Virtual navigation features that attempt to move your cursor will not work with this feature.

Tell Me

Tell Me is a capability in Office Online designed to help you save time. In the Tell Me text box, located on the ribbon, you can type what you want the app to do for you—rather than having to navigate through the ribbon.



For example, if you are in Word Online and want to change the orientation of your document to from portrait to landscape, in the Tell Me box type, “landscape.” An autocomplete dropdown displays all commands related to the text entered in the Tell Me box. Simply press enter to make the change. To make the experience even easier, you can use Ctrl + ‘ (apostrophe) to move your cursor to the Tell Me text box. Many of the editing and formatting functions can be performed via Tell Me using natural language, so you don’t even need to know the specific name of the function you are trying to perform.

Additional help

We know just how important it is to have clear documentation. We now have library of articles for each app covering how to do common tasks using a keyboard and screen reader. In Word Online and OneNote Online, you can press Alt + Shift + A to quickly get to accessibility-specific help articles. You can also find this documentation at Office Online accessibility support.

We are excited for you to try out these improvements!

Source: New accessibility enhancements for Office Online - Office Blogs
 
This is great work. I am mystified though as to why so many, including Microsoft, seem to ignore the millions of us with arthritis, especially in our hands. Voice to text, and voice command interfacing is critical. Especially as the population ages. This impacts literally millions of users, with the numbers growing annually. While Cortana and other "Personal Assistance" are a cute niche, the real work of being able to handle voice dictation and application navigation is still limited to Nuance, and Microsoft's ever aging voice recognition system that has been around since Vista.

Microsoft actually has built in APIs, at least through IE11 and Windows 8.1 that allow decent control. Unfortunately, Nuance chooses to "roll their own." While Microsoft, the only other option, provides fair interfacing until you get to the recognition engine's dictation piece that can become aggravating. I really hope the company will focus as much attention in this area of accessibility as it does others.
 

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