hi folks,
greetings!
the following news report should interest some of you.

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Tech your life in your hands
Published: Thursday, Jan 13, 2011, 11:20 IST


Barrier Break Technologies, a Mumbai-based company, has a range of
assistive products for people with hearing, vision, mobility and
learning impairment. Take a few to start with. They have a hearing aid
compatible, Braille support, large key phone from GE, meant for people
with hearing and visual impairment. There is a vibrating alert, large
keys with Braille script and direct buttons for emergency numbers.
This comes at around Rs1,500. A screen reader for visually-impaired,
along with a magnifier, is priced at about Rs9,750.
Then there is an adaptive keyboard, four times bigger than normal
ones, designed for people with low vision and learning disabilities.
The vowels, consonants, numbers and function keys come in different
colours and are in slightly altered positions to aid easy use. There
is a virtual keyboard too, for people with impaired mobility, that
allows them to point and click for any of the Windows applications.
There is a literacy software for people with learning disabilities,
Braille displayers and translators for the vision-impaired and
augmentative and assistive communication (AAC) devices as well (which
cost upwards of Rs6,000). As Shilpi Kapoor, the founder director of
Barrier Break points out, “though we try to keep the prices as low as
possible, the high customs duties on some products push up the prices
of imported devices.”
Chennai-based Invention Labs Engineering Products Private Limited, too
has a portable AAC device called AVAZ, priced at around Rs30,000. This
product is meant for children with cerebral palsy and aims to help
them communicate with their parents, friends, teachers and
care-givers. It is wheel-chair mountable and supports audio-prompts
for the visually-impaired.
Low-cost solutions
While technology drives the invention and modification of assistive
devices, in a country like India, it is crucial to talk about
cost-effective technology. Until and unless we can provide an
environment of accessibility for all, these technologies remain
showcase inventions at best. There are two aspects to lowering costs.
One would involve creative use of existing technologies and the other
would be indigenous production.
Barrier Break’s Signntalk portal is an example of the former.
Signntalk.org is a web portal that acts as a kind of a call centre for
hearing-impaired people. There are some products available for the
vision-impaired. But we also need to think about other disabilities.
“At Signntalk, we provide a sign language interpreter and translator.
All a person needs is a computer with a webcam and an Internet
connection. Our personnel are trained in sign language and can deliver
a message conveyed to them,” says Kapoor. It is a very effective
platform for connectivity for the hearing-impaired and the service is
available for corporates with hearing-impaired employees too.
Worth Trust, a Vellore-based organisation is doing stellar work in
manufacturing and selling low cost assistive devices. They provide
residential and day-care training facilities for the disabled and have
six manufacturing units, which cater to commercial needs and each of
them works on assistive products for persons with disability. These
are supplied to the Indian market at cost price or at heavily
subsidised prices so that it is accessible to all.
For instance, its plastics unit makes Braille slates with stylus and
supplies it to the Indian market at Rs70 a piece. Their mobility-aid
unit manufactures and supplies manual and motorised wheelchairs, the
former comes to Rs4,500 and above while the latter costs upwards of
Rs27,000. They also assemble the components of the Perkins Brailler (a
Braille typewriter devised by the Perkins School in Boston, where
Hellen Keller studied). While these cost about 700 dollars abroad,
Worth supplies it to the Indian clientele at Rs13,500. The subsidy is
borne by the Hilton Foundation and Worth Trust. They also collaborate
with Christian Medical College, Vellore to design low cost artificial
limbs. With fitment and training, the cost for these comes to around
Rs 20,000, as opposed to Rs3 or 4 lakh that one would spend on a
normal motorised version.
Incidentally, Spice Telecom in India has a Braille mobile phone priced
at about Rs800.
Research in motion
There is a growing body of research in India to explore this sector
deeper. Barrier Break is researching on devices for persons with
disability and their thrust is on hearing, learning and
mobility-impairment as well. “We are trying to use cloud computing to
develop tools for people with learning disability,” says Kapoor.
Worth Trust too has an active research wing and one of their ongoing
projects is with an MIT researcher to develop a Braille labeler for
any public notice. This hand-held device traces Braille into the signs
and thereby enables vision-impaired people to read them. This is being
manufactured by a team of blind
people.
Then there are city-based innovators who are pushing to provide
solutions. In his twenties, Rahul Gonsalves is one such innovator
who’s working on accessibility for electronic interfaces like ATMs and
so on.
There’s Paul D’Souza, working on the Refreshable Braille Display,
which is a device meant for people who are completely blind. This
device produces paperless Braille, “it’s an equivalemnt of a computer
monitor and accommodates about five lines of text”, says D’Souza. His
aim is to provide it at a cost of around 500 dollars. Most of such
equipment, which support a single line of text, cost around 3,000
dollars.
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regards,
prateek agarwal.
Website:
www.prateekagarwal.webs.com
|
www.prateekagarwal.tk

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