Blind Apple engineer speaks on the company’s deep commitment to accessibility 
features


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Blind Apple engineer speaks on the company’s deep commitment to accessibility 
features

Chance Miller

- 7 hours ago

@ChanceHMiller

accessibility
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Apple has always been vocal about its commitment to accessibility features for 
its products, and now a member of the company’s accessibility design and 
quality team is speaking up on just how committed Apple is. A new profile from 
Mashable details Jordyn Castor, a 22-year-old, blind engineer.


Castor has been blind since birth, a result of being born 15 weeks early, but 
she hasn’t let that hold her back. She attended Michigan State University and 
first was given an internship at Apple after speaking to representatives at a 
job fair. After her internship was up, she was hired as a full-time employee.

Castor told Apple reps how amazed she was by the iPad she received as a gift 
for her 17th birthday just a few years earlier. It raised her passion for tech 
to another level — mainly due to the iPad’s immediate accessibility.

“Everything just worked and was accessible just right out of the box,” Castor 
tells Mashable. “That was something I had never experienced before.”

As her internship came to a close, Castor’s skills as an engineer and advocate 
for tech accessibility were too commanding to let go. She was hired full-time 
as an engineer on the accessibility design and quality team — a group of people 
Castor describes as “passionate” and “dedicated.”

Sarah Herrlinger, senior manager for global accessibility at Apple, explained 
to Mashable that it has always been important to the company that accessibility 
features are free and built-in.

“[These features] show up on your device, regardless of if you are someone who 
needs them,” Herrlinger tells Mashable. “By being built-in, they are also free. 
Historically, for the blind and visually impaired community, there are 
additional things you have to buy or things that you have to do to be able to 
use technology.”

Herrlinger also explained that it’s important to have a good team working on 
accessibility features because “accessibility is something that is 
never-ending.” For her part, Castor calls Apple’s accessibility team 
“passionate” and “dedicated,” noting that it’s “incredible” for her to be 
“directly impacting the lives of the blind community.” Castor also played a big 
role in making Apple’s Swift Playgrounds app was accessibility friendly.

One instance of Apple’s deep commitment to accessibility comes with watchOS 3. 
Herrlinger explained that a person who sees can easily look down at the watch 
and tell the time, but a person with vision impairment has to use VoiceOver. To 
combat this, Apple developed a feature that tells time through vibrations, and 
it’s coming with watchOS 3.

Apple has been praised for its accessibility efforts in the past. The National 
Federation of the Blind said two years ago that “Apple has done more for 
accessibility than any other company.”

You can read the full profile of Jordyn Castor on Mashable.

Proud of our talented team dedicated to providing #accessibility for all users 
https://t.co/rhDF5ks094

— Tim Cook (@tim_cook) July 10, 2016

http://9to5mac.com/2016/07/10/apple-accessibility-team-interview/

http://9to5mac.com/2016/07/10/apple-accessibility-team-interview/

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