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Tap

Use cases / Accessibility

Accessibility.

Designed from the start for one-handed use. Inclusive input for blind, low-vision and motor-impaired users.

Tap was designed from day one to be operated entirely with one hand. There is no visual interface required — every gesture has tactile feedback, every command can be fired without sight, and the learning curve is measured in minutes, not months.

That is a deliberate design choice. Our co-founders built Tap to be accessible — and we’ve been honored to work with the blind, low-vision and motor-impaired communities who use it as their primary input device.

What it unlocks

  • One-handed everything. Type, navigate, click — all from one wrist.
  • No visual feedback required. Tactile gestures, audio feedback through your existing screen reader.
  • Customizable for motor differences. Gestures can be reassigned, debounce timing tuned, dwell times configured.
  • Works with VoiceOver, TalkBack, NVDA, JAWS. As a standard HID device, Tap is fully compatible with every major screen reader.

Community

The Tap accessibility community has built tutorials, layouts and resources we maintain in our help center. If you’re new to Tap as an assistive device, contact support — we’ll set you up.

Get started

See it on your wrist.