Ever since I heard last Sunday’s New York Times article, For the Blind, Technology Does What a Guide Dog Can’t (I listened to it online via my supercool talking computer, of course) I’ve been telling friends it’s one of the best articles I’ve ever read about technology for the blind.
Only now do I realize how self-centerred I’m being when I gush over this NY Times article – the reason I like it so much is that it covers some of the same topics I talk about in this blog!
Example: in a post last July called Enter the Letters You See in this Box — If You Can See Them, I wrote about how frustrating it is when you can’t see to read that box of distorted letters that shows up when you’re trying to complete a task on a computer. The New York Times article mentions this, too:
Obstacles on the Web take many forms. A common one is the Captcha, a security feature consisting of a string of distorted letters and numbers that users are supposed to read and retype before they register for a new service or send e-mail. Few Web sites offer audio Captchas.
And just last month I blogged about Texting by Ear. The NY Times story covers this issue and more – the article focuses on T. V. Raman, a computer scientist and engineer at Google who happens to be blind. Raman is working to develop a touch screen phone for people who can’t see.
Instead of asking how something should work if a person cannot see, he says he prefers to ask, “How should something work when the user is not looking at the screen?”
Such systems could prove useful for drivers or anyone else who could benefit from eyes-free access to a phone.
When Mike was looking for Christmas and birthday gifts for me last month, he considered buying me a new-fangled gadget to replace the tape player I use to read books aloud. One of the reviews he found of this particular gadget came from someone who could see. “The guy liked to listen to books while he drove,” Mike told me later. “He didn’t want to take his eyes off the road while fiddling with the audio player.” Dang. If only I’d published a post about that, I could claim I scooped the New York Times on that technology issue, too!
One of my favorite quotes in the NY Times article came from Larry Goldberg, who oversees the National Center for Accessible Media at WGBH in Boston. Goldberg points out that a lot of the innovations designed primarily for people with disabilities end up benefitting the general population. I have never blogged about “universal design,” but I try my best to weave the idea into the speeches and presentations I give.
They include curb cuts for wheelchairs, captions for television broadcasts and optical character-recognition technology, which was fine-tuned to create software that could read printed books aloud and is now used in many computer applications, he said.
Touch-screen cell phones don’t have buttons. That’s kind of the point. You know — touch screen. But without buttons to guide our fingers over a glassy surface, developing a touch-screen cellphone that blind people can use may be too much of a challenge.
But Mr. Raman said that with the right tweaks, touch-screen phones — many of which already come equipped with GPS technology and a compass — could help blind people navigate the world.
“How much of a leap of faith does it take for you to realize that your phone could say, Walk straight and within 200 feet you’ll get to the intersection of X and Y,’ “Mr. Raman said. ”This is entirely doable.”
I guess we’ll just have to wait and see. Or, sorry. Wait and hear.
I think that is a great application for GPS enabled cell phones! With a Bluetooth headset you could receive voice prompts. That kind of technology would work seamlessly alongside a guide dog.
Reggie, I *do* think some people with guide dogs are already using GPS technology, it’s just that the GPS is not attached to their phones. I don’t know anyone personally who uses GPS with their guide dog, but I’ve read accounts. Am hoping somone reading these comments might know more…
Yeah. I’ve heard that The Seeing Eye offers training with the Trecker GPS, but only if you have had your dog guide for a certain period of time. Again, I’m not sure, but I think I read it somewhere. When I visited Seeing Eye last summer, they let us experience travel with the Trecker, but only with the cane. There should be more people like Raman! I can so see that type of technology emerging in a near future. Well Beth here ya later! *smile*
Sandra
Beth- I think the NY Times reporter must be reading your blog!
Ha! Thanks to both of you, Sandra and Marilee, for your comments. Both comments made me laugh — for different reasons!
Glad you found the humor in my comment — I was hoping you would get the joke!
Hey Beth.
First of all, I got my copy of ‘safe and sound’ today – thanks very much! Its a lovely book and I can’t wait to show it off! I wish Irish guide dogs would make something smart like this to raise money and help educate kids.
I know a man who uses gps on his mobile a bit, but hasn’t found a really good accurate one yet that gives the exact information somebody walking with a dog would need. It was still impressive though when we were driving in the van during training and he was able to tell the guide dog trainers which street we were coming to.
Oh, Jenny, so glad to hear you got the book. Let me know how the kids react to it, always fun to hear those stories. Interesting to hear that you’ve run across a blind person using GPS with his phone. I think I know what you mean about the accuracy – some folks don’t understand that the instructions you’d need on foot might be different than the instructions you’d be given if driving.
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