Screen magnifier

A screen magnifier is software that interfaces with a computer's graphical output to present enlarged screen content. By enlarging part (or all) of a screen, people with visual impairments can better see words and images. This type of assistive technology is useful for people with some functional vision; people with visual impairments and little or no functional vision usually use a screen reader.

Use

The simplest form of magnification presents an enlarged portion of the original screen content, the focus, so that it covers some or all of the full screen. This enlarged portion should include the content of interest to the user and the pointer or cursor, also suitably enlarged. As the user moves the pointer or cursor the screen magnifier should track with it and show the new enlarged portion. If this tracking is jerky or flickers it is likely to disturb the user. Also, the pointer or cursor may not be the content of interest: for example, if the user presses a keyboard shortcuts that opens a menu, the magnified portion should jump to that menu. Pop-up windows and changes in system status can also trigger this rapid shifting.

Screen magnifiers can be especially helpful for people suffering from low vision, including elderly users. However, in a 2001 paper, Vicki Hanson noted that people with low vision often also suffer from additional disabilities such as tremors.[1]

Features

Ranges of 1- to 16-times magnification are common. The greater the magnification the smaller the proportion of the original screen content that can be viewed, so users will tend to use the lowest magnification they can manage.

Screen magnifiers commonly provide several other features for people with particular sight difficulties:

  • Color inversion. Many people with visual impairments prefer to invert the colors, typically turning text from black-on-white to white-on-black. This can reduce screen glare and is useful for elderly people suffering from age-related macular degeneration.
  • Smoothing. Text can become blocky and harder to recognise when enlarged. Some screen magnifiers use interpolation to smooth the text to compensate.
  • Cursor customisation. The mouse and text cursors can often be modified in several ways, such as circling it to help the user locate it on the screen.
  • Different magnification modes. Screen magnifiers can alter how they present the enlarged portion: covering the full screen, providing a lens that is moved around the un-magnified screen, or using a fixed magnified portion.
  • Crosshairs. Even with magnification, some users can find the mouse pointer hard to see. Crosshairs – especially when their size, color and opacity are customizable – can make the use of a pointing device easier.
  • Screen reader. Some magnifiers come packaged with a basic screen reader, allowing whatever the user is pointing at to be read out.

Screen magnifiers bundled with an operating system

  • Haiku includes an application called Magnify[2]
  • Linux-based operating systems:
    • Compiz-Fusion window manager has a highly configurable plugin named "Enhanced Zoom Desktop"
    • GNOME has gnome-mag, which as of 2015 forms part of GNOME Shell[3]
    • KDE has KMagnifier (KMag)
  • The Microsoft Windows operating system has included the "Magnifier" application since Windows 98 (released in 1998). It can integrate with a mouse-button toggle.[4]
  • In OS X, the built-in screen magnification feature can be used at any time by using keyboard shortcuts or by scrolling with a mouse or trackpad.[5][6] Screen magnification is built into iOS devices as well.[7]

Stand-alone screen magnifier products

gollark: Palaiologos neural networks doing all programming WHEN?
gollark: If your thing is terribly slow or your application is really widely deployed, then you can afford more programmer time.
gollark: Not *always*.
gollark: But people will be annoyed if operations are *really* slow, and for large-scale stuff you do not want to have to just buy expensive server capacity once you hit 10 requests a second.
gollark: Not *really*? I mean, sometimes.
  • "Free Windows magnification". — a comparison of freely-downloadable magnifiers for Windows.

See also

References

  1. V. L. Hanson (2001). "Web Access for Elderly Citizens". Proceedings of the workshop on Universal accessibility of ubiquitous computing. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  2. "Haiku User Guide - Magnify". Retrieved 2010-05-11.
  3. GNOME Project: Magnification in GNOME Shell
  4. "How-to: Mouse Magnifier". Microsoft Hardware. Microsoft. 2015. Retrieved 2015-04-16. If the Magnify command was not assigned to a button on your mouse by default, you can assign it to one. [...] To turn on or turn off the Magnifier[:] Click the mouse button assigned to Magnify.
  5. "OS X El Capitan: Zoom options in Accessibility preferences". Apple. 2016. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  6. "OS X Yosemite: Zoom pane of Accessibility preferences". Apple. 2015. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
  7. "Use Accessibility features in iOS". Apple. 2016. Retrieved 2017-02-14.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.