Harry,
Voice Access is an Android accessibility service for people with motor
impairments. As the article you linked to describes, when the service is
on, each clickable item (for lack of a better term) is overlaid by a
number so that people who can't touch their phones can say the number.
This service doesn't work very well with TalkBack. The last time I tried
it, which was around the time of its release, TalkBack could read the
numbers but not tell the user what icon the numbers represent.
OK Google lets you do a lot with your voice, but there are bits and
pieces that require touching the screen. My limited experience with Siti
is similar.
Ciao
On 10/13/2017 10:13 AM, Harry Brown wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I had a couple minutes which I don't have that many of these days, so,
> for the heck of it, I did a google search for
>
> complete control Android voice
>
> and I found the 1st result was very interesting.
>
> The article was updated on July 29, 2017, to say that you do not need
> to download and install the XDA app.
>
> I would think that by using the Voice Access app, for speaking to your
> Android device, and using talkback, for your Android screen reader,
> you would have complete control over your Android device.
>
> So, if anyone tries the Voice Access app on your Android device, let
> us know if you do indeed, have complete control of it using just your
> voice.
>
> Anyway, the link to the article is at
>
> http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/control-android-device-entirely-voice
>
> Harry
>
>
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