Abra Company movie transcript
Video transcript with visual descriptions
Title: [250522 - Abra - Demo ecosysteem standaardisatie]
Duration: [00:02:51]
Speaker: Paul van Workum
Note: This transcript includes visual descriptions as an alternative to audio description.
[Visual description]: Paul van Workum, co-owner and accessibility consultant at Abra, the presenter of the video, is a lean man in his late thirties with curly brown hair. He wears a grey t-shirt with short sleeves. Paul wears glasses. He stands at a desk with an open laptop and mobile phones next to it.
Paul: “Many organisations struggle with mobile accessibility.”
[Visual description]: A short close-up of Paul while he continues.
Paul: “At Abra, we believe real progress comes from combining smart automation with in-depth knowledge. That’s why we created an ecosystem that supports the full accessibility workflow.”
[Visual description]: To the right of Paul's close-up, a drawing of the Abra ecosystem appears. It has five elements, each shown by an icon with its name underneath. At the top, Desktop is on the left and SDK is on the right. Lines from both meet in the middle, merge, and become a single downward arrow to Dashboard. From Dashboard another arrow drops and then splits, pointing to Academy on the left and Documentation on the right.
Paul: “It automates testing, facilitates cooperation, and helps with solving issues. It’s built for anyone involved in testing or developing accessible apps. From product teams to auditors.”
Next topic: Abra Desktop
[Visual description]: There is a short break in the presentation. The screen turns red and the next topic of the presentation appears in white letters: Abra Desktop.
[Visual description]: The presentation continues. An open laptop shows Abra Desktop in dark mode. There is a demonstration of how to choose a device in the colom on the left side. A small "create an app" pop-up appears in the middle of the screen, where you can select an app or choose the Abra Demo.
Paul: “With Abra Desktop, you simply select your iOS or Android device or use a simulator.”
[Visual description]: There is a smartphone, with a smartphone left of it and a laptop keyboard right of it. The smartphone in the middle, shows a list with basic rules that should apply to accessible apps. They are clickable for more information.
[Visual description]: An open laptop shows a list in Abra Desktop, with smartphone screens with information next to it. You can click on the examples of the rules and apply the rules in your app with one click.
Paul: “Run automated tests to detect issues fast and add manual findings in just a few clicks.”
[Visual description]: In a new pop-up, you can make some choices and report issues.
Paul: “Add a screenshot, search relevant rules and report the issues efficiently without the administrative burden.”
Next topic: Abra Dashboard
[Visual description]: There is a short break in the presentation. The screen turns red and the next topic of the presentation appears in white letters: Abra Dashboard.
[Visual description]: An open laptop shows the different rules and there is an icon. With a click, a new column appears on the right side of the screen with several filter options.
Paul: “Abra Dashboard gives your team instant insights into test results across your devices and apps. Filter by report, screen, rule, or severity…”
[Visual description]: The eye icon that is visible behind the rule examples is clicked. It shows a bigger screenshot of the smartphone with the rule. Both to the left and right of it there is a list with various details written in it.
Paul: “...and dive into each issue with a clear description, screenshots and a direct link to in-depth documentation.”
Next topic: Abra Documentation
[Visual description]: There is a short break in the presentation. The screen turns red and the next topic of the presentation appears in white letters: Abra documentation.
[Visual description]: The open laptop shows a screenshot of the smartphone with the rule, with both to the left and right of it, a list with various details written in it. With a click on the right frame, new information becomes visible in the center section. It contains more detailed information about the rule, a description, the impact, exceptions, and more.
Paul: “Every test result is connected to Abra Documentation. It contains over 100 accessibility rules, each with an explanation and its impact, examples of failures and code snippets that provide solutions.”
[Visual description]: At the bottom of the page, there are various clickable tags, to get more information about the tags. From this page, you can also go to an overview of all tags.
Paul: “It helps you involve more team members in testing and resolving issues, because accessibility becomes easier to understand and faster to act on.”
Next topic: Abra Academy
[Visual description]: There is a short break in the presentation. The screen turns red and the next topic of the presentation appears in white letters: Abra Academy.
[Visual description]: An open laptop shows the website of Abra Academy on a white background with the tekst in black and links in red. On the left side there is information about what Abra Academy is and how it works, with an image of a laptop with Abra Academy on the screen to the right side of it.
Paul: “Abra Academy offers practical e-learning…”
[Visual description]: After a click on "Go to academy", a new screen appears with an overview of video trainings that you can buy. While Paul is talking, some images from the trainings are shown, like a presenter explaining something and a few PowerPoint slides.
Paul: “...with a kick-off training, a training about testing, about common issues or a deep dive into iOS and Android. All content is available on demand, so teams can follow the training whenever it fits their schedule and revisit it anytime.”
Next topic: Abra SDK
[Visual description]: There is a short break in the presentation. The screen turns red and the next topic of the presentation appears in white letters: Abra SDK.
[Visual description]: We are still on the website, but now on a page about SDK where documentation can be selected for Android or iOS.
Paul: “The Abra SDK automatically catches accessibility issues in your existing UI tests.”
[Visual description]: With a click on the documentation for Android, the page "Abra SDK – Android" opens, with a setup instruction with step by step explanation. As Paul talks about the page, the page is scrolled through so that we can see all content.
Paul: “It integrates seamlessly with Android and iOS testing frameworks, scanning for accessibility issues while your tests run locally or in CI/CD.”
[Visual description]: Back on the previous page, now the iOS documentation is chosen. There we see the setup for Abra SDK - iOS and the page is scrolled through so that we see all the content.
Paul: “The results are reported in your IDE and Abra Dashboard, with links to solutions from Abra Documentation. Catch issues early and fix them fast, before they reach your users.”
[Visual description]: The presentation on the laptop screen is over. We go back to Paul's presentation, where he is standing at a desk with a laptop on it.
Paul: “Abra provides more than just tooling. It’s a complete ecosystem designed to help teams grow in mobile accessibility. With structured guidance, powerful tools, and practical learning. We support product teams and auditors in making real progress. Start your trial today and discover how Abra can support your journey.”
[Visual description]: Paul's presentation is over. The Abra logo appears on a white background. From the bottom of the screen, a red area extends to halfway across the screen where Abra's slogan appears in white letters: "Make your apps accessible. With Abra."