Android and apps developers are becoming more sensitive to the special accessibility needs of user with disabilities. Get benefit from Android special apps that aid in making Android more accessible and user-friendly: Apps and mobile operating systems are now designed with these users‚ ease of use and convenience in mind.
Android Apps benefit for the hearing impaired
Text-to-speech.
If you would like to converse with a friend who can’t read sign language face to face, the Text to Speech Toy app is your ally. It lets your device talk to your friends for you. Let your Android phone or honeycomb tablet do all the talking! Text To Speech Toy is fun application that let’s your device dicate text to you. You can manipulate the speed that the text is dictated and also the pitch of the voice that reads it. Visit here to Download from Android Market.
Google Translate.
This smart tool can be utilized to reach out to others using sound, and if you communicate in multiple languages, switching between different tongues is no hassle.
ASL Dictionary
ASL Dictionary, available for download in the Android Market, provides a reference of over 4,800 signed words. The signed words are shown in easy-to-follow, clear videos that can be searched. One reviewer of this app was a school bus driver for deaf children, who reported the app as an “excellent tool” for herself as well as her attendant.
The app received a 4-star rating and costs $2.99 to download. To learn more about this app, visit here.
Benefit from IM Clients and Texting apps.
Google Talk and other messengers now offer accessibility features, and vibration can be used as a convenient alerting tool, too.
Dropping your voice plan.
Talk to your carrier’s customer service representative and see if you can be offered a discount for not using up your voice plan or inquire about dropping your voice plan altogether. As more carriers are made aware of the special needs of users with disabilities, there is greater room for them to come up with programs and tools to cater to these special clients in the future.
Wireless CapTel by Sprint
A mobile app on select Android smartphones that improves device accessibility for the hearing impaired. Wireless CapTel allows mobile users to read conversations with real-time word-for-word captions on their wireless phones. Users can place a call in the same fashion they would when using a traditional landline phone – by dialing the number directly on the device. The app then connects callers directly to the CapTel service when the phone is dialed. When the receiving party answers, callers can listen to what the other person is saying and also read captions on the phone’s display screen.
The application can be downloaded on select Android 2.2 or higher devices from the Android Market for free here.
These apps are a step in the right direction and with the right resources and dedication.









Android FTW. I’m so glad I opted for an HTC Desire instead of a crummy iPhone.