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TalkBack - How to use it to read eBooks and turn it on/off easily

Steve602

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Feb 22, 2015
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I recently found out about the built-in capability of Android phones called TalkBack. It allows people to hear text converted to speech. Although it is intended for people with sight issues to read text and navigate their phones, it can also be turned on just to read audio books, read emails, etc. and then turned off.

I use it to listen to Kindle eBooks.

The problem that makes people hate it is that they try it and it is like a virus! It starts talking no matter what you are doing and changes the control you have so you may not find a way to turn it off. This is sad because it can be a valuable feature for everyone if properly set up. I want to walk you through setting it up properly so you can turn it on and off whenever you choose.

FIRST: How to turn it off the first time. If you are unfortunate enough to turn TalkBack on without understanding it, here is how to turn it off.

1) Swipe the screen in an "L" motion with one finger. In other words, down and then right. This opens the "Global Context Menu". This is activated when you turn on TalkBack.
2) In the upper left, click on "Pause Feedback".
3) Tap once on "OK". Talkback acknowledges you have selected "OK".
4) Quickly tap twice on "OK" to complete the action.
This pauses TalkBack so you can navigate normally to turn it off.
5) Go to your home screen and touch the menu icon in the lower left corner.
6) Select "Settings"
7) Select "My Device" at the top
8) Scroll down to "Accessibility" and select it.
9) Scroll down to "TalkBack" and select it then turn it off.

How to use TalkBack to help you read ONLY WHEN YOU WANT TO USE IT and How to turn it off quickly when you need to like when you receive a call.

I want to get you started successfully with TalkBack. You can then explore it further for your particular needs.

First let's make it easy to pause it whenever you want so it is out of the way temporarily. You can then either turn it off or turn it back on as you wish.

1) Navigate to "TalkBack" and turn it on.
2) Once it is on, swipe the screen in an "L" motion with one finger. In other words, down and then right. This opens the "Global Context Menu". This is activated when you turn on TalkBack.
3) Tap once on the checkbox that says "Always show this warning". TalkBack will acknowledge you have selected the checkbox. Then tap twice on it to remove the check.
This will allow you to quickly turn off TalkBack.
4) Tap once on "OK". Talkback acknowledges you have selected "OK".
5) Quickly tap twice on "OK" to complete the action.
This pauses TalkBack so you can navigate normally to turn it off.

You are now ready to use TalkBack at your leisure. At any time, you can pause it quickly using the “L” motion. You can then go to settings and turn it off if you choose.

To reenable TalkBack after a pause:
1) Touch the top of your screen and swipe down. You will see the notifications screen. You will see “TalkBack is suspended”. You can touch it to reenable TalkBack.

Useful hints:
1) I have found the IVONA Text-to-Speech HQ TTS engine has the best voice. It sounds more natural. To get it, go to “Play Store” and install it. It is free. Once it is installed, you enable it by going to Settings->My Device->Language and Input->Text-to-speech options. Then select IVONA.
2) If you use Google Text-to-speech, you will probably want to slow down the speech rate under “Language and Input”. The problem with Google and Samsung text-to-speech is they don’t pause between sentences which is very annoying to me.
3) If you have TalkBack enabled, remember that to scroll, you must use two fingers. To select anything, you must touch it once followed by touching it twice.
4) If listening to an eBook, I haven’t found a way to get the screen to automatically scroll to the next screen of text. Therefore, I have to use a two-finger swipe to get to the next screen and then touch the screen to start Talkback reading the screen.
5) In your eBook, change to the smallest font you can and change the text settings to get the most text you can on a single screen. This way, TalkBack will read for awhile before you need to swipe to a new screen of text.
 
Another reason to hate gestures and swiping instead of just having a button/menu setting. Ridiculous. How would anybody ever figure that out?

I find swiping to turn pages in an ebook reader to be very natural. Because it's what you might be doing when turning the pages when reading a real book, thumbing through pages. You don't press buttons or use menus to turn the pages of a paperback novel. :D
 
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I find swiping to turn pages in an ebook reader to be very natural. Because it's what you might be doing when turning the pages when reading a real book, thumbing through pages. You don't press buttons or use menus to turn the pages of a paperback novel. :D

Okay, I'll give you that one, but L-shaped swipe, quick double-tap, two-finger swipe...? :rolleyes: Way more trouble than it needs to be. Why?
 
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I have a Kindle paperwhite e-reader.... and to hell with all that swiping stuff, I just use the tap it method to advance to the next page.

swiping is too much trouble requiring extra actions just to get to the next page. why make a single finger operation into a Two Handed operation?

I like my ereader, it helps me to go to sleep on nights when my brain just won't shut down. putting on headphones and watching TV just ends up with me falling asleep at dawn when I need to be going to work.... not a good thing.
 
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Okay, I'll give you that one, but L-shaped swipe, quick double-tap, two-finger swipe...? :rolleyes: Way more trouble than it needs to be. Why?

Each gesture does a specific function. Thing is this is an accessibility feature, which is primarily for the visually impaired, most users don't need it. It can be rather difficult to navigate menus and find on-screen buttons when you can't see them. ;)

I do use some gestures on my phone actually, it's a feature that the Oppo ColorOS version of Android has. Like double tap the screen to wake it up, or if the screen is off, drawing ">" or "<" skips tracks when playing music, two fingers up or down adjusts volume, draw an "O" activates the camera, "V" to turn on the flashlight. Or if the screen is on, swiping with three fingers takes a screen shot, instead of having to press power and volume down simultaneously.

Got so used to doing double-tap to wake, I'm often double-tapping other phones to wake them, and wondering why nothing is happening. :D
 
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I have a Kindle paperwhite e-reader.... and to hell with all that swiping stuff, I just use the tap it method to advance to the next page.

swiping is too much trouble requiring extra actions just to get to the next page. why make a single finger operation into a Two Handed operation?

I like my ereader, it helps me to go to sleep on nights when my brain just won't shut down. putting on headphones and watching TV just ends up with me falling asleep at dawn when I need to be going to work.... not a good thing.

A Kindle is a purpose made e-book reader. It has hardware buttons dedicated to turning pages. There's no need to be having on-screen buttons or menus for that. I don't have one of them and as it's not available, butt I do often look at reference and textbooks on my phone though, and now got used to swiping to turn pages.
 
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A Kindle is a purpose made e-book reader. It has hardware buttons dedicated to turning pages. There's no need to be having on-screen buttons or menus for that. I don't have one of them and as it's not available, butt I do often look at reference and textbooks on my phone though, and now got used to swiping to turn pages.
ummmm, Kindle Paperwhite does not have any buttons sir, unless you include the Power Button. Everything is done with onscreen taps or swipes.

IMO, it is better than the Kindle Fire which my wife has and she is regretting getting the new 'Fire' model and loosing the 'paperwhite' model.... the Kindle Fire locks up everytime she turns around, and requires a full reboot. If that keeps up, it is going in the trash.... we have to give it the full 30 second Hard Reset everyday to get it to do what she wants. and that ain't much. She reads a book, and she plays a game. but when she wants to stop reading, and switch to the game, it locks up..... until it is rebooted again.
 
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I really want to get a Paperwhite because it is front lit instead of backlit. Backlit screens are really hard on the eyes, especially for long form reading, and at night.

I will second that comment. once the sun peeks out from under the dew around here, I turn off the backlight and it goes for days and days and days between charges. The only time I use backlight is when all the lights in the house are off, and I can't sleep. then I just use maybe 30% ? enuff to read it, then when my fingers fail to "turn a page" it turns itself off until I wake again...
 
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ummmm, Kindle Paperwhite does not have any buttons sir, unless you include the Power Button. Everything is done with onscreen taps or swipes.

OK, I stand corrected. :) The Kindle I saw in the UK, had buttons on the either side of the screen. It was an e-ink type screen though.

TBH I never read many books for pleasure, usually they're for work or reference.

Perhaps I need more e-books and an e-book reader, rather than chopping down trees?
My desk... LOL
books.jpg
 
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OK, I stand corrected. :) The Kindle I saw in the UK, had buttons on the either side of the screen. It was an e-ink type screen though.
Mine is the original Paperwhite, does not require any back lighting to view it. Nor does it have buttons on it.

KISS works very well with these things.... much like with our smartphones.
 
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Bro..... I do the exact same thing on my tab since getting my OPO lol. Find myself thinkin the batterys dead :D

You got CM on your OPO? Is double tap to wake a feature of CM in general, or just when it's ported to the OPO? I'm currently using ColorOS on the Find 7, but when I was using CM11, double tap to wake still worked. The OPO and F7 are very close relatives of course.
 
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Not sure if its standard in cm or only on the opo or only on the 801 chip tbh mate but my s3 certainly didn't have it on CM based roms, it did have like a 10second delay from where the screen timed out where you could tap to wake but if it had been constantly waiting for the tap it would have killed the battery so I'm guessing it's a chip thing?
 
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Not sure if its standard in cm or only on the opo or only on the 801 chip tbh mate but my s3 certainly didn't have it on CM based roms, it did have like a 10second delay from where the screen timed out where you could tap to wake but if it had been constantly waiting for the tap it would have killed the battery so I'm guessing it's a chip thing?

Yeh, thinking about it, could be a low-level driver in the kernel that works with the Snapdragon 801. For screen-off gestures to work, it has to keep the touch hardware itself active, but the display off. On Samsungs there's a physical button at the bottom, that wakes them up.
 
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Thanks for the tips its saved me forking out money for a fire hd tablet.

You now have a feature called 'continuous reading' which works for Kindle app. On a page you just swipe right then double tap and it will read through the pages without having to swipe through them individually. Not sure how well this works with other eBook apps.
 
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Do you know how to change the continuous reading speed? Whenever I select the changing speed option it changes the reading speed without continuous reading activated, but it does not affect the continuous reading speed when activated. It seems there must be separate ways to change the reading speeds and I can't figure it out. This application is a disaster



Thanks for the tips its saved me forking out money for a fire hd tablet.

You now have a feature called 'continuous reading' which works for Kindle app. On a page you just swipe right then double tap and it will read through the pages without having to swipe through them individually. Not sure how well this works with other eBook apps.
 
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