>>Nathan: When you build features for people that have a range of abilities, you end up making something that works for everybody. >>Kelly: For me, one of the amazing things even today, after 15 years of Microsoft, is how we're inventing new experiences. >>Brett: When we sat down, we're focusing on using vision or no vision, we decided really, we need to work on performance. To start narrating, we're going to go down to the Windows key and press enter. >>Computer: Windows. Start Windows. Search box. [indistinct] >>Kelly: So right now, we're at about 80% of capacity upon entering co-speak. This is about how I would use my computer >>Computer: [indistinct] >>Kelly: That probably sounds like gibberish, but, I mean, once you get used this, it's pretty clear. >>Brett: One of the things that we spend a lot of time looking at is how do you really help develop or be immersed in what it means to be blind. We built in the developing mode a narrator. >>Computer: Cancel. Shift. Developer mode enabled. >>Brett: So you can see that we've ordered the screen so we press H to jump to the first heading. >>Computer: Heading level 1 Go to Bing homepage. Brett: And it will kind of immerse you in what it feels like to not see right. >>Computer: Click down to change to suggestions view. >>Kelly: Across many applications, when you're typing, whether it's weather, news, Cortana, you're getting search suggestions. >>Computer: Fond du Lac, one of one, selected. >>Kelly: It's the first time that we're building that level of accessibility into both our screen and our applications. >>Anne: I'm going to flag this message >>Computer: Contact delete button. Move button. Save Flag mode. >>Brett: Xbox looked closely at how we can diversify how people represent themselves. And so, we can see a new set of avatars so that somebody can select an avatar that looks more closely to themselves.