Google Engineer Adapts Cell Phone for Blind
By SUNITA SOHRABJI
indiawest.com
February 19, 2009 02:10:00 PM  

How functional would your cell phone be if you couldn’t see its numbers?

For many blind users, including Google engineer T.V. Raman, the small keyboards 
of a cell phone can be daunting.

So Raman is developing software to adapt T Mobile’s G1 touchscreen phone — 
which uses Google’s Android software — to make it friendlier for blind people
and others with limited vision, such as the elderly.

“The small keyboard of a cell phone is not easy to use, particularly if you 
need one hand free,” Raman told India-West in a telephone interview from Google
headquarters in Mountain View, Calif. The blind generally need one hand free to 
hold a guide dog.

Cell p hone screen readers — software that reads aloud the content of the 
screen — are available, but often cost as much as the cell phone itself, said
Raman, whose adaptation to the G1 allows the phone to be used with a single 
hand.

Blind G1 users begin by touching anywhere on the screen. Raman’s dialer 
interprets that first touch as 5, the center of a regular dial phone pad. The 
user
can then slide a finger up, down or sideways to finish dialing the number. 
Mistakes can be corrected simply by shaking the phone.

“You can actually use it with one hand,” said the affable Raman, 43, who lives 
in the Blossom Hill area of the Silicon Valley, with his constant companion
Hubbell, a yellow Labrador.

The G1 has been on the market since October 2008, and Raman is releasing his 
software free and as open source over a Google Web site: 
http://code.google.com/p/eyes-free/.
Raman and his colleagues at Google are also tweaking the G1’s GPS system to 
meet the needs of the blind.

Raman lost his sight to glaucoma, at the age of 14. The Pune native said his 
biggest challenge at the time was “convincing people that I could do what
I wanted to do.”

India in the late 70s and early 80s was largely devoid of political 
correctness, said Raman, adding, “If people thought you couldn’t do something 
because
you were blind, they’d tell you.”

In 1989, after finishing his masters in computer science at the Indian 
Institute of Technology, Bombay, Raman and his brother arrived at Cornell 
University
in Ithaca, New York. 

The relaxed, quiet Cornell campus proved to be less of a challenge to negotiate 
than the streets of Pune and Mumbai, said Raman, who jokingly envisioned
the scenario of taking a guide dog onto a crowded Mumbai bus. 

Raman — who freely admits he’s not very good with a cane — got his first guide 
dog in 1990, Aster, who opened up the small Cornell campus for him. Aster,
a black Lab, guided Raman for nine years until she died of cancer in December 
1999.

Hubell, Raman’s effusive yellow Lab, has been with him since Aster died, and 
has her own Web site with lots of photos. The two frequently hike together
in the San Francisco Bay Area’s huge expanse of wilderness areas.

The advent of technology has made the world more tangibly accessible for the 
disabled, Raman told India-West, adding that for him, the biggest advantage
is being able to read.

“There was a time when what I read was limited to what was available,” said 
Raman, adding, “Now, I can read whatever I choose to read.” Raman uses a screen
reader to navigate the Web. 

Online banking and shopping are particularly useful for people with limited 
mobility, said Raman, adding that while technology for the disabled has not
quite kept pace, it has equalized things a lot more.

After earning his Ph.D. in applied mathematics from Cornell, Raman worked for 
Digital Equipment Corporation in Cambridge, Mass. He moved to the Silicon
Valley in 1995, and began working at Adobe, on its signature .pdf file format. 

Raman next moved on to IBM Research in 1999, then to Google in 2005, where, he 
said, he thrives in an environment that is “bottom-up, driven by people
who are motivated by their ideas."

Source:
http://www.indiawest.com/readmore.aspx?id=911&sid=1


      



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