Apple Previews New Door Detection, Apple Watch Mirroring, and Live Captions Accessibility Features - MacRumorsOpen MenuShow RoundupsShow Forums menuVisit ForumsOpen Sidebar
Skip to Content

Apple Previews New Door Detection, Apple Watch Mirroring, and Live Captions Accessibility Features

Apple today previewed a range of new accessibility features, including Door Detection, Apple Watch Mirroring, Live Captions, and more.

Apple Accessibility OS features 2022
Door Detection will allow individuals who are blind or have low vision to use their iPhone or iPad to locate a door upon arriving at a new destination, understand how far they are from it, and describe the door's attributes, including how it can be opened and any nearby signs or symbols. The feature will be part of a new "Detection Mode" in Magnifier, alongside People Detection and Image Descriptions. Door Detection will only be available on iPhones and iPads with a LiDAR scanner.

Users with physical disabilities who may rely on Voice Control and Switch Control will be able to fully control their Apple Watch Series 6 and Apple Watch Series 7 from their iPhone with Apple Watch Mirroring via AirPlay, using assistive features like Voice Control and Switch Control, and inputs such as voice commands, sound actions, head tracking, and more.

New Quick Actions on the Apple Watch will allow users to use a double-pinch gesture to answer or end a phone call, dismiss a notification, take a photo, play or pause media in the Now Playing app, and start, pause, or resume a workout.

Deaf users and those who are hard of hearing will be able to follow Live Captions across the iPhone, ‌iPad‌, and Mac, providing a way for users to follow any audio content more easily, such as during a phone call or when watching video content. Users can adjust the font size, see Live Captions for all participants in a group FaceTime call, and type responses that are spoken aloud. English Live Captions will be available in beta on the iPhone 11 and later, ‌iPad‌ models with the A12 Bionic and later, and Macs with Apple silicon later this year.

Apple will expand support for VoiceOver, its screen reader for blind and low vision users, with 20 new languages and locales, including Bengali, Bulgarian, Catalan, Ukrainian, and Vietnamese. In addition, users will be able to select from dozens of new optimized voices across languages and a new Text Checker tool to find formatting issues in text.

There will also be Sound Recognition for unique home doorbells and appliances, adjustable response times for Siri, new themes and customization options in Apple Books, and sound and haptic feedback for VoiceOver users in Apple Maps to find the starting point for walking directions.

The new accessibility features will be released later this year via software updates. For more information, see Apple's full press release.

To celebrate Global Accessibility Awareness Day, Apple also announced plans to launch SignTime in Canada on May 19 to support customers with American Sign Language (ASL) interpreters, launch live sessions in Apple Stores and social media posts to help users discover accessibility features, expand the Accessibility Assistant shortcut to the Mac and Apple Watch, highlight accessibility features in Apple Fitness+ such as Audio Hints, release a Park Access for All guide in ‌Apple Maps‌, and flag accessibility-focused content in the App Store, Apple Books, the TV app, and Apple Music.

Popular Stories

imac video apple feature

Apple Released Yet Another New Product Today

Friday March 20, 2026 2:39 pm PDT by
Apple has unveiled a whopping nine new products so far this March, including an iPhone 17e, iPad Air models with the M4 chip, MacBook Air models with the M5 chip, MacBook Pro models with M5 Pro and M5 Max chips, the all-new MacBook Neo, an updated Studio Display, a higher-end Studio Display XDR, AirPods Max 2, and now the Nike Powerbeats Pro 2. iPhone 17e features the same overall design as...
iPhone 18 Pro Deep Red Feature

iPhone 18 Pro Launching Later This Year With These 12 New Features

Wednesday March 18, 2026 7:39 am PDT by
While the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max are not expected to launch for another six months or so, there are already plenty of rumors about the devices. It was initially reported that the iPhone 18 Pro models would have fully under-screen Face ID, with only a front camera visible in the top-left corner of the screen. However, the latest rumors indicate that only one Face ID component...
ios 26 4 pastel

iOS 26.4: Top 10 New Features Coming to Your iPhone

Friday March 20, 2026 2:44 pm PDT by
iOS 26.4 isn't the major update with new Siri features that we hoped for, but there are some useful quality of life improvements, and a little bit of fun with an AI playlist generator and new emoji characters. Playlist Playground - Apple Music has a Playlist Playground option that lets you generate playlists from text-based descriptions. You can include moods, feelings, activities, or...

Top Rated Comments

50 months ago

Apple again leads in accessibility. Love the Live captions and door detection.
To be fair, Android has this Live Captions feature already as well as Google Chrome. I had to rely on it on all platforms.

Microsoft announced and is testing Live Captions on Windows 11 insider builds for a few months now.

Apple is late as usual but I’m sure they will be the best implemented one as that is just them.

Regardless, everyone wins here. We need more accessibility support across the industry.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
50 months ago

I think the difference is that Google does all processing on their servers, Apple's implementation is on-device only and works offline. (not to mention your conversation stays private)
Actually, Google’s live caption is all done on-device and does not require an internet connection to function. They have been moving more and more voice request processing to on-device the past few years.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
50 months ago

Actually, Google’s live caption is all done on-device and does not require an internet connection to function. They have been moving more and more voice request processing to on-device the past few years.
This is correct. Taken from Android Accessibility Help ('https://support.google.com/accessibility/android/answer/9350862?hl=en') page: "All captions are processed locally, never stored, and never leave your device."

When it comes to accessibility, users need anything that can help them now. They can't sit around and wait for something else, so I would say Apple is late to the game here. I know a co-worker who switched to Android several years ago so he could use the live caption feature for meetings. Previously, he was using a captioning service over the phone, but was not a fan of having another live person listening in on the meetings.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
surfzen21 Avatar
50 months ago

Apple again leads in accessibility. Love the Live captions and door detection.
Agreed. A lot of their accessibility features seem to get over looked but they actually are life-changing for folks in need.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Apple$ Avatar
50 months ago
Better late than never, Apple. As a CI Android user, I love the live captions feature so much! it's just so handy when you are watching a YouTube video that doesn't have captions. Instead of skipping it as I did in the past, I just turn on the live captions.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
50 months ago

To be fair, Android has this Live Captions feature already as well as Google Chrome. I had to rely on it on all platforms.

Microsoft announced and is testing Live Captions on Windows 11 insider builds for a few months now.

Apple is late as usual but I’m sure they will be the best implemented one as that is just them.

Regardless, everyone wins here. We need more accessibility support across the industry.
I think the difference is that Google does all processing on their servers, Apple's implementation is on-device only and works offline. (not to mention your conversation stays private)
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Related Apple News: Motoring | World News | Iphone | Culture | News