"THE Google Chrome it will check for typos in your URLs and show suggested sites based on what it thinks you meant,” he says the Verge.
From announcement of Google:
When you type a website into line Chrome's address book, it will detect typos in URLs and recommend websites based on the corrections. This will increase accessibility for dyslexics, students, and anyone else who makes typos, making it easier to access sites you've visited before despite spelling mistakes. This feature is now available on Chrome for desktop and will be rolling out to mobile in the coming months.
It was one of several new features Google announced as part of World Accessibility Awareness Day (Global enviroment Accessibility Awareness Day).
Google also announced that the application by Lookout (which provides audio cues for users with problems vision) can now provide image descriptions on web pages "powered by an advanced visual language model developed by Google DeepMind".
Chrome on Android recently updated its TalkBack screen reader.