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Handheld Device Reads Printed Words to the Blind
Posted by
samzenpus
on Thu Jul 06, 2006 12:50 AM
from the too-busy-to-read dept.
from the too-busy-to-read dept.
geekotourist writes "3,000 people in Dallas this week for the National Federation of the Blind convention are getting a demonstration of what life is like when you can read printed menus, mail, business cards and memos," reports the Dallas Morning News. The NFB spent two million dollars developing the $3,495 Kurzweil-National Federation of
the Blind Reader, which weighs 15 ounces and combines text-to-speech with sophisticated OCR. The device 'gives the user an initial "situation report," describing what it can see. The user then makes a decision about whether to take a picture. After a few seconds to process the image, the contents of the document are read aloud.' Beta testers describe the joys of reading receipts, CDs, food labels, bulletin boards, conference printouts, or of simply reading books with privacy, without another person's help."
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News: Ray Kurzweil's "The Singularity is Near" 970 comments
popo writes "The Wall Street Journal has a (publicly accessible) review of "The Singularity is Near" -- a new book by futurist, Ray Kurzweil. By "Singularity", Kurzweil refers not to a collapsed supernova, but instead to an extraordinarily bright future in which technological progress has leapt by such exponentially large bounds that it will be... well, for lack of a better word: 'utopian'. "Mr. Kurzweil... thinking exponentially, imagines a plausible future, not so far away, with extended life-spans (living to 300 will not be unusual), vastly more powerful computers (imagine more computing power in a head-sized device than exists in all the human brains alive today), other miraculous machines (nanotechnology assemblers that can make most anything out of sunlight and dirt) and, thanks to these technologies, enormous increases in wealth (the average person will be capable of feats, like traveling in space, only available to nation-states today)." On one hand its fantastically (even ridiculously) optimistic, but on the other hand, I sure as hell hope he's right." Got mailed a review copy; I'm not finished yet, but I agree - optimistic perhaps, but the future does look pretty interesting.
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Real-world Zork: (Score:4, Funny)
>*turn wheel right*
>You have crashed your car. It is on fire.
>*Run away*
>I don't understand "away."
why not braile output? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:why not braile output? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re:why not braille* output? (Score:3, Interesting)
A braile display, which needs to display a line of text - a single changing character wouldn't work, as users slide fingers across the characters - is expensive to produce in the small numbers required.
A sound chip and headphones are used in every mp3 player, HPC and computer in existance. Probably ~50c in bulk amounts.
And as for speed: People who use file readers often have them set to run at 2x-4x spee
Re:why not braile output? (Score:5, Interesting)
As a side note, my supervisor is blind and has a device like this of the desktop varity. He can "read" about 300 words per minute, and be doing other things at the same time. I have fine vision but the though of being able to listen to my textbooks while doing the dishes almost justifies the $2500 price tag.
JFMILLER
Parent
Re:why not braile output? non-braile readers 'yet' (Score:2, Informative)
As one who is sporadically losing her sight, I would find this very helpful, but do not, as of yet know braille, nor in the middle of medical procedures which may or may not improve the issue in the possible near future, have the time, energy or immediate need to add one more semi-difficult skill to the list of "Help! I'm overwhelmed".
BUT BOY! It would be a handy addition for the research I need right now.
Re:why not braile output? (Score:5, Interesting)
Mind you, I use the word 'visually impaired', and not 'blind' for a good reason. A large proportion of the people considered legally blind do have some vision - they fall into the category called 'Low Vision'. There are about 2 million people in the US at present who have Low Vision, but number will swell significantly as the baby boomers age into 50+. Most visual impairments are actually age related, and when you've had vision till age 55 and you suddenly lose it in 6 months, it's a very disturbing experience. Most people who undergo that experience either do not have the ability to or don't care about learning tactile braille at that stage. Even as of now, only a fraction of the visually impaired population can actually read braille.
Also, as the other poster mentions, braille devices are extremely expensive, require a lot of power and are bulky (both in size and weight). A braille display with 40 braille cells will cost an additional $2500.
All that said, I should also mention that building a purely verbal user interface for 'describing' things is a very challenging task. I've been working the last 2 years on a similar device but purely for addressing navigation issues for the visually impaired. We already have a prototype device that can read special barcodes at a distance of about 6 feet, and then that barcode can be looked up in a database to determine the user's location. But how to describe their current location in a manner relevant to their task is proving to be a very tricky problem to solve. Every few months, we feel that we are very close and then discover one more issue that sets us back another few months.
So, it's encouraging to see that someone has been successfully able to build a verbal only interface for descriptive tasks.
- Rudrava Roy
Minnesota Laboratory for Low Vision Research
University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
Parent
Re:why not braile output? (Score:2, Interesting)
How long until we see this on cameraphones? (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as current cameraphones go, (picking semi-randomly...) a Treo 700p has a 312MHz XScale processor, and a PPC-6700 has a 416 MHz XScale. Both have 1.3 megapixel cameras.
Re:How long until we see this on cameraphones? (Score:2)
Those are smartphones, not camera phones. Don't expect the average camera phone to have anywhere near that much CPU power.
Awkward! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Awkward! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Awkward! (Score:3, Funny)
Soko
National Federation of the Blind Reader? (Score:3, Funny)
I wasn't aware that one blind reader constituted a federation.
</sarcasm>
I seriously had to read that two or three times before it came out right.
-:sigma.SB
Inventor is Raymond Kurzweil, Singularity guy (Score:3, Informative)
Kurzweil was the principal developer of the first omni-font optical character recognition system, the first print-to-speech reading machine for the blind, the first CCD flatbed scanner, the first text-to-speech synthesizer, the first electronic musical instrument capable of recreating the sound of a grand piano and other orchestral instruments, and the first commercially marketed large-vocabulary speech recognition system.
Re:Inventor is Raymond Kurzweil, Singularity guy (Score:3, Interesting)
He placed the head inside a grand piano and played - the effect was striking (no pun intended). He tapped and scratched the head and it sounded like he was doing it to my head. What a memory!
Re:Inventor is Raymond Kurzweil, Singularity guy (Score:3, Informative)
The 1975 reader cost $50,000 (over $150,000 in today's dollars) and was the size of a dishwasher. This new reader "is about a thousand times smaller than the original Kurzweil Reading Machine, the PDA in the portable Reader is two thousand times faster. In fact, the portable Reader can execute about 500 million instructions per second as compa
Now the blind can play text adventures. (Score:3, Funny)
"You are in a maze of twisty passages, all alike."
Okay, so the bar has been set... (Score:3, Interesting)
So you'd start with a good digital camera and a small handheld device. Then you need OCR -> text and text -> speech. What's the state of research or code that one could use in FOSS projects? It's been a year or so since I last checked, but AFAIK the current OCR software that's Free just doesn't stack up with that latest commercial products....
great for blind grad students (Score:3, Interesting)
It looks stupid (Score:2, Funny)
Marketing Blows (Score:2)
I hate pricing like "3495". Why not suggest 3500? Especially for a big ticket item such as this. More reasonably, how about 20% over cost? (given its a medical item). Pick a number, and go with it. 3495?
I know -- those pricing tricks work... Oh well.
Ratboy
Re:Nice phone (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Didn't we have these? (Score:2, Informative)
Oh and not only that, we took 6 mon
Ray Kurzweil started in 2002, or 1975... (Score:3, Interesting)