Better accessibility for blind athletes
At the moment I cannot login because although an edit box appears for my user name and password, the on-screen keyboard is not able to type anything in. This is very rare for this to happen, so there has to be something going on between the way those edit boxes are presented, and the way they interact with Voice-over and the on-screen keyboard.
I cannot use the calendar. If I go to the calendar tab, I hear only numbers, not connecting with any months, and very difficult to select a day from the calendar. This can be a very common design flaw with screen readers and voice-over.
Thirdly, much of the information is de-columnized. In other words, where data is compared between the goals of the work-out and the actual performance, the information is not lined up in a way that I can tell (1) what was the goal and (2) what was achieved.
There are many features which don’t, in fact work, so a couple of comments. If I was to go through the app and give TP every accessibility issue it would take me hours. Also, it is not my responsibility to tell TP how to make its app accessible. It is TP’s responsibility to do that. These are basic design principles that all app designers should know, and if they don’t, should learn. There are all kinds of resources out there on how to do this. If TP wants to pay me as a consultant to go through screen by screen to tell it all of the accessibility issues I can do that, but I would suggest either using your own internal resources or contracting out to a designer with expertise in accessibility.