All of these key UX takeaways and no discussion of accessibility? Because of a variety of cognitive and physiological (not to mention environmental) issues, there are users who don't/can't have spoken language capacity. If we're going to revolutionize our input interfaces, we need to also remember there are more centers and ways of being. We're marginalizing user types because designers can't or won't think past their own capabilities.
All of these key UX takeaways and no discussion of accessibility? Because of a variety of cognitive and physiological (not to mention environmental) issues, there are users who don't/can't have spoken language capacity. If we're going to revolutionize our input interfaces, we need to also remember there are more centers and ways of being. We're marginalizing user types because designers can't or won't think past their own capabilities.
I believe this design should be an optional version.