VoiceOver was first introduced in
Mac OS X 10.4 and the target was users who had difficulty in reading due to
vision impairment, particularly the
blind. A preview had also been made available for
Mac OS X 10.3 Panther, and was titled "Spoken Interface Preview." VoiceOver treats the
user interface as a hierarchy of elements, which are navigated by various
keystrokes. Elements also are "interacted" with—for example, interacting with a
text box allows reading its text and, if possible, editing it; interacting with a
scroll bar allows it to be moved using the keyboard. VoiceOver also includes support for many
Braille displays. In addition, VoiceOver includes features for those that cannot use the mouse, such as keyboard-based navigation. For users with
MacBooks or
Magic Trackpads, a number of special
multitouch features are also available. The trackpad will respond to gestures, much like iOS's version of VoiceOver. A specific example is using the trackpad to explore the actual visual layout of elements on the screen—sliding one finger around the trackpad will select elements, tapping twice will activate them. In Mac OS X 10.5, Apple added the "Alex" voice, which offered improved quality of speech and a more human-like sound. Previously, the voices were directly descended from those used in Apple's "
Speech Manager," which originated in the early 1990s. Also, Alex voice has natural breathing, unlike all other voices in Apple. In Mac OS X 10.7, Apple offered the download of RealSpeak voices from
Nuance for use with VoiceOver.
Accessibility Inspector Accessibility Inspector is made to verify the accessibility of
OS X applications. It displays information about the
GUI element that is currently under the cursor. ==iPod Shuffle==