Source: Yanko Design
This is a narrow but revealing example of how accessibility design can collapse entire workflows into a single product—rather than fixing the broken chain of steps that made assistance necessary in the first place. The cup's temperature sensors and audio feedback solve a real problem: kettle safety and brewing precision. But the framing as independence-enabling tech masks a deeper issue—why kitchen appliances still require sighted operation after decades of smart home integration. Consumer IoT vendors are retrofitting accessibility into connected devices as a feature rather than designing for it from the start, which means disabled users get niche solutions instead of the assumption of universal design.