The Nexus 5 Claria Vox from Odin Mobile: A Talking Smartphone with a
Keypad - AccessWorld(R) - April 2015
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April 2015 Issue
Volume 16
Number 4

Product Evaluations and Guides
The Nexus 5 Claria Vox from Odin Mobile: A Talking Smartphone with a Keypad

Bill Holton

Many people who are blind still prefer a feature phone over a
smartphone because they find dial pads easier to navigate and control
than a flat touchscreen.
Indeed, in the January 2015 issue of AccessWorld we
reviewed the Odin VI,
a blind-friendly feature phone with a pre-enabled voice guide. In this
article we will take a look at a brand new offering from Odin: the
Nexus 5 running
Claria Vox. This phone works like a talking feature phone, only this
one is based on the Android operating system. The Nexus 5 includes a
suite of apps
designed specifically for accessible, touch-button control, but you
can also operate the phone as a standard touchscreen device running
Android 4.4.2 KitKat,
and enjoy the same features and apps as other accessible smartphone users.

The Claria Vox Keypad

The Nexus 5 Claria Vox is a standard Google Nexus 5 smartphone with a
maximum 16 GB of memory (it's not possible to increase memory on the
phone with a
micro SD card). The phone arrived in the original Nexus 5 packaging,
along with a micro USB charging cable and power adapter. The Nexus 5
Claria Vox is
a standard Android smartphone, with a Sleep/Wake button on the right
edge, Volume Up and Down buttons on the left, a headphone jack on the
top and a USB
power port on the bottom. The phone does not have physical Home, Back
or Recent Apps buttons.

They phone's keypad and touch-button functionality is facilitated by a
tactile overlay. The Claria Vox arrives fitted with a black, rubber,
bumper-style
phone case that covers the bottom half of the touchscreen with a total
of 19 small rectangular cutouts you touch like buttons--I'll refer to
these cutout
areas as "buttons" or "keys" from here on. When your finger meets the
touchscreen glass exposed by these buttons, you can activate a
combination of standard
Android controls and a feature-phone-style keypad. The overlay
includes three separate areas, which can best be described from the
bottom up: At the bottom
center is the Android Home button. Above the Home button are four rows
of three keys each: a standard phone keypad. Use these keys to enter
numbers and
letters the same way you do on a standard feature phone. A small
raised line just beneath the 5 key replaces the customary raised dot.
When you are in
a text edit field, the Star (*) key cycles through various punctuation
marks and the Pound (#) key cycles through numbers to lower and upper
case letters.
Other times the Star key announces the time and date and the Pound key
announces missed calls, text messages, and the like.

A wide raised line separates the top of the keypad from two rows of
buttons that activate many of the Claria Vox controls. The two middle
buttons in these
two rows are the Up and Down keys. To the left of the Up key is the
Menu button, which will either open the application specific menu
button, or, whenever
you are in an edit field, accept voice dictation. To the right is the
Status/Correct button. In standard mode this button reports connection
and GPS status
and battery connection. When in an edit field, it acts as a backspace key.

To the left of the Down button is the OK button; to the right is the
Android Back button. Use the Back button to back out a screen and
eventually return
to the main Home screen.

At first I found using the overlay a bit awkward. However, after I
noticed the two raised areas I found it somewhat easier to orient my
fingers. I do wish
the separation between the top two command rows and the dial pad were
much wider, however. Reaching for the 2 button, for example, almost
required reaching
to the very top of the overlay and then counting down three buttons.
If I didn't do it this way, all too often I would mistype, since I am
not accustomed
to beginning a dial pad entry partway down the dial pad, despite the
raised separators.

My nails are trimmed fairly short, so I found it easy to point my
fingertips straight down into the recesses to reach the touchscreen.
Women with longer
nails may find it difficult to do this, and may have to use the pads
of their fingertips and press just a bit harder on the overlay to
activate the buttons.

Using the Claria Vox Interface

My Nexus 5 arrived pre-charged, and when I turned it on it came up
speaking with the Talkback Android screen reader configured with the
Google text-to-speech
voice set at a moderate speed and medium volume. Normally on Android
phones you must "Slide to unlock" in order to begin using the phone.
You must also
do this with the Nexus 5, but you do not have to locate a particular
spot on the touch screen or move left to right. Merely slide a finger
in any direction
against the exposed upper glass of the touchscreen and Claria will
announce: "Home...Phone, one of nine."

You are now on the Claria Vox home screen, and as you have probably
guessed, Phone is the first of nine Claria Vox applications. You can
use the Up and
Down buttons to scroll through the list, or enter the number of the
desired option.

Phone

To answer a call, press the OK button; to reject a call, or hang up on
an existing call, press the Back button. The Claria Vox does not
announce caller
ID by default, but a quick touch of the screen while the phone is
ringing prompts the announcement. Some may appreciate the privacy
afforded by this design.
I tend to carry my phone in my pocket, however, and would prefer to
hear this announcement by default, which is not currently an option.

Pressing the OK button at the Phone prompt calls up a menu of five options:

Dialer

Use this option to enter a phone number, then press the OK button to
place the call. You can also use the Dictate button at the uppermost
left of the overlay
to speak the phone number you wish to dial. For me dictation worked
perfectly, even when I purposely mumbled a few of the digits.

Contacts

Use this option to search your contacts. Use the Up and Down buttons
to scroll through your list, or enter a letter (press the 8 key twice,
quickly, to
enter a "U," for example). Pressing the Menu button offered options to
create or import a contact.

Call Log

This option presents a list of calls, and allows you to recall, text
message, or create a contact from the log.

Voice and Numeric Shortcuts

This option allows you to set speed dials and voice prompts for quicker dialing.

Voicemail

I had difficulty setting up my voicemail. The first time you access
this option you are taken to the voicemail setup, where you are
prompted to enter a
PIN. However, with the phone against my ear, I could not make dial
entries, and if I lowered the phone I could not hear the prompts. I
was advised by the
company that pressing the OK button anytime during a call toggles
speaker phone mode. This worked, but it also pointed out a lack of
context-sensitive
help.

Text Messages

Use this option to send, read, and reply to text messages. Current
feature phone users will be familiar with the steps to compose and
review messages.
You may be surprised how quickly you can send out a message when you
use dictation, however. Speak some text and Claria Vox will offer up
multiple responses.
I almost always received 100% accurate responses and could select the
first option presented, but I could also cursor down to select from
other, slightly
different responses.

E-mail

The e-mail option was easy to set up using my Gmail account.
Unfortunately, however, Claria Vox did not download my Gmail contacts
or calendar. I rather
suspect this is a limitation of Android overlays, since I experience
the same issue with the EqualEyes Android suite, which I
reviewed
 in the December 2013 issue of AccessWorld.

See below for a solution to this problem.

Vision Aids

This option includes several useful camera-based apps:

Optical Character Recognition

Claria Vox includes a basic Optical Character Recognition (OCR)
program. It is no match for something like KNFB Reader, but I found it
serviceable, especially
for flat, printed pages. Activate the app, hold the phone over the
page to be scanned, then touch the screen or press OK. You can read
the results using
the Up and Down buttons, and then save the text, image, or both.

Color and Light Detectors

With either of these apps enabled, simply touch the screen or press OK
to get a reading. I found both of these very handy.

Camera

Here you can use your camera to snap a photo or take a video. Press
the 1 key to toggle the light. One extremely useful feature was the
ability to give
an image or video a description before saving it to the Gallery. The
camera app also includes a bar code identifier that will search the
Internet for scanned
products. I have never had much luck using such apps, and for me the
Claria Vox proved no exception.

Utilities

The Claria Vox utilities include a Notes app you can use to create and
edit notes, including text you save using the OCR app. You can also
accessibly browse
the Android File Manager, set alarms, create and listen to voice
memos, access the calculator, consult your calendar and enter new
appointments, and check
your local or remote weather.

Claria Vox also includes an accessible GPS app based on Google Maps
and navigation. The entry fields say "Enter Address Only," but I was
able to dictate
a location, such as the name of my local hospital, and the app entered
the information perfectly. You can set the travel mode, alert
announcement distance,
and location update frequency. The GPS does not have "look around,"
capabilities.

Multimedia

The Nexus 5 Claria Vox offers several additional apps that enable
access to smartphone mobile capabilities using a talking,
feature-phone interface.

Mobile Web Browsing

Some feature phones offer rudimentary Web browsing, but none do it
especially well. The ability to browse the Web on the go may be one of
the main reasons
you may be considering stepping up to a smartphone, and the good news
is that the Claria Vox overlay offers up a capable Web experience.

Webpages you call up--via voice search, bookmark, direct URL entry, or
pressing OK on an already loaded page--will read to the end
automatically. Pressing
the 9 key will pause and restart page voicing. You can also use the Up
and Down buttons to move through the page. Pressing the 1, 2, 3, or 4
buttons will
filter the page by element, links, headings, and forms respectively,
similar to a computer browser's quick navigation shortcut keys. Press
3 for example,
then use the Down button to navigate by headings. Press the 1 key to
continue element by element.

I found browsing with the Claria Vox browser significantly easier than
with any feature phone I have evaluated. I would not trade in my
touchscreen browser,
however.

Claria Vox Radio

This app gathers links to many popular radio stations from around the
world. The listings were a bit out of date--several of the streams I
tried returned
error messages. But I was able to add other MP3 or MPU streams, and
then add these stations to my favorites.

Claria Vox News

The News app offers a list of news sources sorted by country. The US
list currently includes Voice of America, CNN News, ESPN, ABC 17 News,
and the Los
Angeles Times. You can listen to the articles being read in full, or
use the Up and Down buttons, but, frustratingly, the web browsing 9
button to toggle
reading off and on did not work. I also wished there were a way to add
extra RSS feeds to the news reader.

Claria Vox MP3 Player

This app plays the music files you have downloaded onto your device.
At first I was unable to fully test this app because USB tethering to
my computer
would not work by default. After consulting with an Odin
representative, I was instructed to enter the Android Settings menu,
access the Storage option
and enable a USB connection. This worked, but hopefully the company
will enable tethering by default soon.

Either pressing the OK button or touching the Nexus screen acts as a
Play/Pause button. The player also played some, but not all, of the
videos I tried.
It had no trouble with MP4 files, but AVI files would not play. Nor
would the short video I created to my iPhone and e-mailed to myself.

The Claria Vox Book Reader

The Claria Vox Book reader will open Daisy 2, MP3 books and text
files. It is also supposed to open Audible books. Unfortunately,
currently, the first
time you log into your Audible account using a new device, you must
complete an inaccessible CAPCHA. There is a link for blind users, but
on the Claria
Vox browser, this did nothing.

Bookshare and BARD Mobile Talking books are also not supported on the
Claria Vox.

Android Applications

You can run all of your device's standard Android apps on the phone
using Talkback. There are nineteen apps listed in this menu option,
including Google
Play Store, Google Wallet and Android Device Settings. If you invoke
any of these you will be taken out of the Claria Vox skin and placed
into standard
Android mode running Talkback with a slightly different voice, which
makes it easy to keep track of which mode you are in. Most of the
Android standard
Talkback swipe and tap gestures are available to you using the top
half of the phone, which is not covered by the tactile overlay.
However if you wish
to enter text you will need to remove the tactile overlay in order to
access the onscreen keyboard. You can also install and use a Bluetooth
keyboard.

A discussion of Talkback accessibility is beyond the scope of this
review. However I will note that the Up and Left home gesture will
return you to the
Claria Vox software menu. If you added any Play Store apps to the
phone they now show up in the Android Applications list. Also, if you
log into your Google
account using the Play Store or another app, your contact lists will
now appear in the Claria Vox phone, text messaging, and e-mail apps.

Updates

This option enables a quick way to update the Claria Vox apps, add new
Claria apps as they are released, and update your phone's operating
system. During
my evaluation of the Nexus 5 Claria Vox there were no updates to
install. I would have thought that a Nexus phone would be eligible to
upgrade to the newest
Android version, Lollipop, but this was not the case.

Settings

This option offers access to all of the standard Android settings.
This is where you go to join a Wi-Fi network, and enable Bluetooth,
GPS, and NFC. Other
settings include voice language and speed, color scheme, and text
size, and braille display settings.

One setting that is unique to the Claria Vox is the Android
Interaction setting. The first option in this menu is Home Button Long
Click. Enable this toggle
and you can perform a long touch of the Home button to toggle back and
forth between the Claria Vox app list and the default Android Home
screen.

Recommendations

The Nexus 5 Claria Vox software could definitely benefit from some
upgrading. Odin did not create this software; they licensed it from a
British company.
Consequently, it will remain to be seen how responsive the developers
will be with software updates and adding new apps, such as the ability
to read BARD
Mobile Talking Books.

All that said, I believe that for some people with visual impairments
the Nexus 5 Claria Vox will be an excellent mobile experience. As
noted above, many
people with visual impairments feel much more confident using a
keypad, and for these individuals the Claria Vox tactile overlay
offers a one-of-a-kind
way to pair the ease of using a keypad with the power of a smartphone.

Another reason I suspect many people with visual impairments are
reluctant to upgrade to a smartphone is the all-or-nothing change such
a move represents.
It takes time to learn to use a touch screen reader effectively, and
during this learning period your phone may seem less than useless.
With the Nexus
5 Claria Vox you can spend the day using the phone in keypad mode,
then, when you have free time, you can explore the more advanced
Android features and
develop touch screen skills at your own pace (and with the excellent
help of Odin tech support and a series of audio tutorials I am told
the company will
soon release).

Product Information

Product: Nexus 5 Claria Vox
Available from:
Odin Mobile,
855-217-9459
Price: $599 (comes unlocked for both the T-Mobile/Odin and AT&T networks)

Comment on this article.

Related articles:

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* A Review of the Odin VI: An Accessible Feature Phone from Odin Mobile
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More articles from Bill Holton:

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* A Look at the JAWS Training Bundle from Freedom Scientific
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