Mobile Phone for the Blind 114
Anonymous Coward writes "Owasys - a Spanish company - is launching a mobile phone for the blind next week. No visual display as a speech synthesiser reads everything that appears on the screen out loud. Also speaks the name and number of incoming callers."
Re:braille (Score:1)
Embedding such a device in a mobile phone, even if reduced to a lot less, would either require a braille reading device with only a few characters (rendering it quite useless), or a mobile phone the size of a keyboard (try to put *that* in your pocket).
I stand corrected. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:2)
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:5, Funny)
Blind people at the movies?? Are you drunk?
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:2)
really, no bullshitting. sometimes though they're arranged special helpers who tell them what's going on if you can't figure it out from the speeches.
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
Blind people can participate in many areas of the world that once were closed to them. Unfortunately, places like Slashdot continue to erect barriers that a blind person cannot overcome. Have you attempted to register for an account on Slashdot recently? You'll notice a graphic of some letters that the system expects you to type in an edit-field. The graphic is completely inaccessible to a blind person.
I realize that this part of my message is off-topic, but I have several friends who are blind, who are q
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
The reason these systems don't work for blind people is because of friends like you.
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:2)
His blind friends shouldn't have to beg for someone to come over and help them when signing up for a new website.
By providing assistance, he wouldn't fix the problem- just perpetuate it. Sometimes providing a workaround just helps the underlying problem survive and grow ever-larger.
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
<i>His blind friends shouldn't have to beg for someone to come over and help them when signing up for a new website.
By providing assistance, he wouldn't fix the problem- just perpetuate it. Sometimes providing a work around just helps the underlying problem survive and grow ever-larger.</I>
When I have offered to help, I received a response similar to what Minna Kirai posted. I also participated in a brief exchange of e-mail with Randall Swartz, who authored Ravaged by Robots [webtechniques.com] to alert him to
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
Fortunately the proposed xhtml/css way of generating the pages is much, much better.
Possibile workaround (Score:1)
and worse case scenerio the few blind people without speakers (there may be some, with braille readers, or some other non-audio reader) could send an e-mail, that could be humanly determined wether it was a generated submittal..
(My father is legally blind, and uses readers also)
Re:Possibile workaround (Score:1)
Re:Possibile workaround (Score:1)
If the solution is worse than the problem itself, then it's not a solution
Re:Possibile workaround (Score:1)
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:2)
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
Kind of like what closed captioning does for the deaf. It's just nowhere near as common, though.
These two technologies (audio description, closed captioning) are a
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
On some Fox stations, the SAP audio on The Simpsons is in Spanish.
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:1)
(Whap!)
Just because someone is visually impaired does not mean that they cannot enjoy activities a sighted person can.
What about a ballgame for instance... Actually Watching is only a portion of the whole experience. The crack of the bat, the roar of the crowd, the smell of popcorn, the taste watered down beer, spending time with family and friends.
I'm guessing that you're the kind of person who doesen't own a radio, because you have a tv, or always have to have the newest and t
Re:I stand corrected. (Score:2, Funny)
This is for anyone that's seen Trigger Happy TV [google.com].
YEAH HI. YEAH. IM... SHIT I DON'T KNOW WHERE I AM.
Hopefully it'll sell well! (Score:3, Funny)
Deaf enabled phone (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, my girlfriend is deaf and carries a cell phone. It works pretty well.
She has one of those T-Mobile Sidekick [t-mobile.com] ones where you connect the Internet (web browser, AIM, and even an available SSH client).
It's actually quite useful. She can get her email, AIM and SMS messages in one place. There are even AIM -> TTY [lormarlogic.com] services so she can make "voice" calls on the road.
It's still a phone too. So if there's some sort of emergency and a hearing person is there- they could use it.
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Re:Hopefully it'll sell well! (Score:2)
Re:Hopefully it'll sell well! (Score:2)
While the voice part of a phone is useless to them, they can get in touch and if need be get help by SMSing other. Also, instead of hualing around additional pen and paper to write out a message to communicate with those who don't understand sign language, they can just type (thumb?) it out and show the screen to whoever needs to see the message.
I don't know about where y
Slight privacy issue (Score:3, Funny)
"DIALLING QUICKDIAL 1: HOT HORNY HOUSEWIFE LINE"
Or if you're playing away from home...
"Contact MISS PERT BREASTS is calling!"
in front of wifey.
Oh, the possibilities
Re:Slight privacy issue (Score:1)
In the 80s there was a movie called "See no evil, Hear no evil". It stars Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor (to show how 80s it is). It's a comedy about two guys solving a crime they witnessed. Richard is blind, and Gene is deaf. Gene can lip-read so they were able to communicate.
Done before... (Score:5, Informative)
talx (Score:2, Interesting)
No visual display... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:YOU FAIL IT! (Score:1)
Re:YOU FAIL IT! (Score:2)
...HAND.
This should make Messaging Spam entertaining... (Score:4, Funny)
"Incoming message: 'Did you know you can increase your penis size overnight? ....'"
Of course then you'd at least be able to prove monetary damages due to the spam, since you lost your job over it....
Funny, but rather scary too.
Re:This should make Messaging Spam entertaining... (Score:1)
I'm surprised this wasn't out long ago (Score:3, Insightful)
Sounds like a good idea
I have a feeling there may be more of a need than for those who drive around with a cell phone in one hand and a latte in the other.
Re:I'm surprised this wasn't out long ago (Score:1)
Ah, well, here in the UK, they've got 7 more days to do that before it becomes an offence.
If you're in the UK and you drive and use a phone, remember you've only got one week left to get a dashboard cradle and hands-free kit fitted - don't get caught out.
UKP30 per offence at first, but they're looking at changing that to UKP60 and 3 points within a year.
Fantastic news!
Re:I'm surprised this wasn't out long ago (Score:2)
That's rather silly. It's a feel-good partial-solution... something which doesn't threaten cellphone business interests in any way (and only helps them sell more kits)
Studies [uri.edu] show [transport2000.ca] that the greatest danger of telephoning and driving is not from having one hand distracted with a machine (because many folks safely handle CDs and eat food while driving), but the mental load [apa.org] of being engaged in a convers
Re:I'm surprised this wasn't out long ago (Score:1)
But at least this is a step in the right direction - distracted with both hands free is better than distracted with a phone in one hand or a shoulder hunched so that one arm can't move freely and the head can't turn to look around. Next, we need to persuade people not to use the things at all, but that will be harder and take
Re:I'm surprised this wasn't out long ago (Score:1)
I my country it has been illegal for quite some time. I never bought a real handsfree kit. The cheap ones look crappy and I don't want that in my (expensive) car. There are the good ones that go for around 1000Euro, but I'm not willing to afford that for they odd call I could get in my car.
The easy solution is this: let the goddanmed phone ring while you drive. If you can (not on a highway), just drive to th
ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator! (Score:4, Insightful)
If a device is made to enable someone with physical challenges, it should be a cinch to use for anyone who isn't challenged.
From there, a device could be addended with options, for those that want them. In fact, devices built this way would have a much higher "cool" factor than most of the poorly-desogned products we see today. Witness all the excitment every time an "easy-to-use" product comes to market...that alone makes my point.
If one considers that virtually all consumers will be physically challenged at some point in their lives (broken bones, aging, etc.), why shouldn't manufacturers be building devices with a "fail-safe" user mode that permits limted, but functional use?
Frankly, this design strategy alone would revolutionize consumer product manufacture in many sectors (auto, electronics, etc), and solve many of the "user-unfriendly" problems that plague consumers today.
Unfortunately, what we see today is engineering-driven design that frustrates all but the most determined users, and even those face barriers to seamless use that simply should not exist.
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
As such, perhaps those people should be consulted not because they represent a lowest-common-denominator user but instead they may provide the vision of how the applications could really take off.
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
Think where how many of these posts wouldn't even exist if Hawking hadn't been able to see what was going to happen to him as his illness progressed.
He started developing his own means of communication - taking the best of what had already had been developed - and adapting it to his needs.
If the technology had stood still at that time where he was - think of how much we would lose.
A mind-controlled car is pretty much what people have shown they would like - or a mindless one.
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
i'm like that every morning on the way to work, i honestly have no idea how i get there...
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
Before reading the article, I was hoping it would say there was a active changing haptic brail system. (read: bumps that move) but I didn't find it. This phone is a step in the right direction, regardless if there have been products similar in
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:2)
Yeah, because we folks with functional limbs find tongue-joysticks a piece of cake to use.
And I can't even tell you how much easier I can read braille as opposed to a quick glance at a screen...
Of course, we might have a problem accomodating both the deaf and the blind... Perhaps we could make everything communicate via pheromones. "Hey, did you just piss on me?" "Nah, just my
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
An interesting statement - food juxtaposed with that ability.
It seems the kernel of the statement - good humor aside - is:
Sorry, but the "cripple the product to accomodate crippled users" PC BS kinda peeves me. Humans have a basic level of sensory and motor capability. Where convenient, we can make life easier for those lacking some of those capabilities, but in most cases, a multi-sensory product will do its job more efficiently.
First, who are you apologi
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:2)
A general sort of "I know this will offend some folks, but I intend to say it anyway" apology.
So I don't see in what ways products are supposed to be "crippled" to accommodate "crippled users".
The phone in question seems like a good example. Most of us could use it, and it also makes life more convenient to the blind. However, most of us would prefer an ordinary old text+sound+vibrate phone over one that could only communicate via sound.
I'm curious if this is a
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
I still think a good engineer actually designs with the thought in mind that we are all employing many senses all the time - leading me back to the parent - that no - products are not being crippled by the including the needs of th
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:2)
Fine, say they're not "crippled" then. Instead, we could say they are "six times as expensive to account for features fewer than 1% of customers will ever need".
Great!
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
I mean imagine if a group of humans 'suddenly' evolved some new sensory ability - it doesn't matter what - if it appeared everyone was going in that direction, it would be a smart move to consult with those people as to what the experience was like for them.
My
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:2)
That's an ambiguous statement. If you mean "all designers should be aware of the possible existence of LCD users", then it is so trivially true that it hardly bears saying. But if you mean "all products should be designed so that an LCD can use them", then you are completely insane.
Frankly, this design strategy alone would revolutionize consumer product manufacture in many sectors (auto,
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
Re:ALWAYS design for the lowest common denominator (Score:1)
They are - they're called consumers. You give them a piece of crap and they give you money.
Extended market (Score:1)
Re:Extended market (Score:1)
disposable phones (Score:1)
Yeah but... (Score:1)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:1)
Re:Yeah but... (Score:1)
Special phone for... the blind? (Score:3, Interesting)
It would seem that no one else has noticed this seeming absurdity yet...
"Normal" phones do not significantly hinder the blind! Wake up, people! This has no obvious purpose other than yet another way to bilk medicaid on another very expensive specialty device that actually has less functionality than a normal version of the same product (no screen? That probably halved the cost to the manufacturer).
And for those who would mention SMS or caller ID, I have a friend who already has an ordinary cell phone that will read those to him (no idea on the model, but nothing special). So even those two functions don't discriminate against the blind.
Re:Special phone for... the blind? (Score:2)
You don't even need to do that. Some of the newer phones have voicedial, and polyphonic ringing tone you can associate with people in your address book.
Re:Special phone for... the blind? (Score:2)
-B
Re:Special phone for... the blind? (Score:1)
Exactly! I don't know about other cellphones, but mine has a little "feelable" dot on the "5" key. If you know where the 5 is, you know where all other keys are. Low-tech solution for the blind and people with bad visibility.
Yeah, but... (Score:1)
"Hey, how did my phone figure out how to escape an event horizon?"
So...? (Score:2)
Umm... if there is no visual, how does the speech synthesiser read off the screen?
TXT'ing? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:TXT'ing? (Score:2)
Umm, isn't spelling out the text how you're supposed to read this stuff? It's not like there's an audible difference between "R U" and "are you"...
UMTS Phones for the deaf (Score:1)
The URL of the provider is
http://www.drei.at (in german, you might find the same at their UK branch at http://www.three.co.uk but maybe they don't offer this package)
And it runs Linux (Score:1)
All good stuff.
Oh, wonderful! (Score:2)
Re:Oh, wonderful! (Score:1)
Well thank God (Score:2)
Mel Blanc's Legacy (Score:2)
So this idea comes from a Spanish company. For some reason I immediately pictured a phone with the voice one of those punch-drunk cats from a Speedy Gonzales cartoon saying "your seeestir in California says hhhhhhello'.
This one is already shipping... (Score:1)
A commercial for it (Score:1)
Might have to buy one (Score:2)
Why? Because it's a phone where the designers are actually paying attention to how the user interface works! I'd love to have that on my current phone.
When the user interface is basically the image your company projects to the world, why do they apparently stick a solitary sophomore intern on the job of creating it? Wish I could program in my own interface.
The Phone of the Future? (Score:2, Interesting)