Apple adds on-device subtitles and AI accessibility across platforms
Apple announced new accessibility features across its ecosystem, many powered by Apple Intelligence, including on-device generated subtitles for uncaptioned video content on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro. Other updates include enhanced VoiceOver, Magnifier, and Voice Control, as well as a new eye-tracking control feature for power wheelchairs in Apple Vision Pro.
Key Takeaways
- VoiceOver’s Image Explorer will use Apple Intelligence for more detailed descriptions of images systemwide, including photographs, scanned bills, and personal records.
- Generated subtitles will appear automatically for uncaptioned videos on iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple TV, and Apple Vision Pro using on-device speech recognition.
- Voice Control will let users describe buttons and controls in natural language, with availability noted for English in the U.S., Canada, the UK, and Australia.
- Accessibility Reader gains on-demand summaries, built-in translation, and support for complex layouts like scientific articles with columns, images, and tables.
- Apple Vision Pro will support a new power wheelchair control feature with Tolt and LUCI alternative drive systems in the U.S.; Apple says support will expand to more drive systems.
Why It Matters
Apple is pushing AI into accessibility features that sit across its hardware and media stack, not just one app or device. For streaming and video delivery, the most immediate change is on-device generated subtitles for uncaptioned video on Apple TV, iPhone, iPad, Mac, and Vision Pro, which adds another captioning layer for content that ships without text. The broader signal is that Apple is tying privacy-preserving on-device processing to platform accessibility. Watch the rollout scope later this year, especially the English-only subtitle availability in the U.S. and Canada and any expansion beyond the initial Tolt and LUCI wheelchair integrations.
Read full article at apple.com
