Posted January 9, 2012

Mobile Accessibility application and new Accessibility Sprint ID packs make
smartphone usage more accessible for Sprint customers

OVERLAND PARK, Kan.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Sprint (NYSE: S) is offering
customers who are blind or visually impaired, as well as elderly individuals
or those who cannot read print on smartphones because of physical,
perceptual, developmental, cognitive or learning disabilities, free
solutions that will provide them easier access to their Android-powered
smartphone's functionality. The solutions include five new Accessibility
Sprint ID packs - bundles of applications available on select
Android-powered smartphones - and the Mobile Accessibility suite of
applications.

Mobile Accessibility, developed by Code Factory, is a suite of accessible
applications that have been specifically designed for people who are blind
or visually impaired. Mobile Accessibility, which features a simplified user
interface and textual information that is spoken aloud using voice synthesis
to aid navigation of the device, will be offered to Sprint postpaid and
Boost Mobile prepaid customers through the Android Market for free starting
this quarter.

The application is available for free for postpaid Sprint customers with
Android-powered smartphones activated on a monthly service plan that
includes data, such as the Everything Data plan starting at $79.99. The app
is also free for no-contract customers with Android-powered smartphones on
Boost Mobile's Monthly or Daily Unlimited plans.

The application, which typically costs $99, will be available in English and
Spanish in the Android Market under the names Sprint Mobile Accessibility EN
& ES and Boost Mobile Accessibility EN & ES.

"Sprint strives to satisfy all our customers' wireless needs, and with
solutions such as these, we're helping our customers with disabilities
realize the full potential of their smartphones," said Fared Adib, Sprint
vice president-Product Development. "That is why we're offering the Mobile
Accessibility app and Accessibility ID packs free of charge."

"Code Factory is delighted that one of the most important carriers in the
world decided to subsidize Mobile Accessibility for their customers and is
helping to assure that the product reaches as many people as possible at no
cost for them," said Eduard Sanchez, Code Factory CEO. "We are proud to be a
new partner with Sprint and hope this is the start of a longtime
relationship for accessibility for blind and visually impaired Sprint
customers."

The main features of Mobile Accessibility:

.Touch navigation: Users can simply move their finger around the screen and
the voice synthesis will read the text located under their finger. They can
swipe up/down/right/left and tap on the screen to navigate through the
interface, and they can enable sound and vibration feedback.

.Easy to input text: In or outside the Mobile Accessibility suite users can
use the touch QWERTY keyboard or speech recognition to write text quickly
and easily - making it possible to write an SMS or email using their voice
only.

.Voice synthesis: Provides customers natural sounding voice read back.

With Mobile Accessibility, users can do the following:

.Phone: Make calls, answer calls, hear the caller ID and manage their call
log.

.Contacts: App tells user how many contacts they have and speaks the
contact's name they selected.

.SMS: Virtual keyboard is larger and fills the entire screen. When the user
clicks a letter on the keyboard, the app reads the letter to them. This
makes it easier for them to compose emails or SMS messages. It also reads
SMS messages to the user.

.Alarms: Set their alarms.

.Web: Full Web browser experience; also reads text from Web page to the
user.

.Calendar: Create, edit and delete a calendar entry. View all events per
day, week or month.

.Email: Full access to Gmail accounts; reads emails to the user.

.Where am I?: GPS application that gives the user an update about their
current location.

.Access to basic phone functions, such as date and time, missed calls, etc.
User can click on the function and it speaks to them.

"Having the ability to gain greater access to information on smartphones
through the use of a free suite of applications is a very positive
development in the blind community's quest for more affordable choices,"
said Mitch Pomerantz, president of the American Council of the Blind (ACB).
"The American Council of the Blind commends Sprint for its willingness to
take another positive step toward full product accessibility."

Accessibility Sprint ID packs:

Today Sprint is launching five accessibility-themed Sprint ID packs,
developed by Apps4Android, which are bundles of applications designed to
accommodate the access needs of Sprint subscribers with print disabilities -
people who are unable to read standard printed material, including text on
their smartphone, because of blindness, visual disability, physical
limitations, organic dysfunction or dyslexia. For more information about the
Accessibility ID packs, read today's press release.

About Sprint Nextel

Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline
communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers,
businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel served more than 53 million
customers at the end of 3Q 2011 and is widely recognized for developing,
engineering and deploying innovative technologies, including the first
wireless 4G service from a national carrier in the United States; offering
industry-leading mobile data services, leading prepaid brands including
Virgin Mobile USA, Boost Mobile, and Assurance Wireless; instant national
and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a global Tier 1 Internet
backbone. The 2011 American Customer Satisfaction Index showed Sprint is the
#1 most improved company in customer satisfaction, across all industries,
over the last three years. Newsweek ranked Sprint No. 3 in its 2011 Green
Rankings, listing it as one of the nation's greenest companies, the highest
of any telecommunications company. You can learn more and visit Sprint at
www.sprint.com or www.facebook.com/sprint and www.twitter.com/sprint.

About Code Factory

Founded in 1998 with headquarters in Terrassa (Barcelona), Spain, Code
Factory is the global leader committed to the development of products
designed to eliminate barriers to the accessibility of mobile technology for
the blind and visually impaired. Today, Code Factory is the leading provider
of accessible mobile applications such as screen readers, screen magnifiers,
and Braille interfaces. Code Factory's products are compatible with the
widest range of mainstream mobile devices running on Symbian, Windows
Mobile, BlackBerry Smartphones, and Android. Among Code Factory's customers
are well-known organizations for the blind such as ONCE in Spain, and
carriers Sprint, AT&T, Bouygues Telecom, SFR, TIM and Vodafone.

_______________________________________________
ATI (Adaptive Technology Inc.)
A special interest affiliate of the Missouri Council of the Blind
http://moblind.org/membership/affiliates/adaptive_technology

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