- 02-07-2011 11:26 AM 

New Delhi: Even as technology has made it possible for the blind to use the 
internet, to click photos using special cameras and to undertake activities 
that are effortless for the sighted, innovators are now seeking to aid them 
further with new and cheaper gadgets.


Currently, the visually impaired are able to read and browse through various 
web pages on the internet one line at a time. Paul D Souza, a Karnataka-based 
engineer has created a multiline refreshable display that gives a visually 
impaired person instant access to the computer revolution. 


"My device is like a monitor for the blind where they can read by feeling the 
Braille dots on its surface. The dots created by raising or lowering small pins 
simulate the bumps of an embossed page and the text changes as the online page 
refreshes itself," Souza told PTI.


He says such devices are currently being used in countries in the West but at 
costs that are very prohibitive in India. "Technology has not changed for the 
last 30 years. People continue to use the single-line display device which 
costs as much as $3,000. I have tried to create a five line - 20 characters per 
line - display at a cost of $500. It's also the first device in 14 years to 
meet NLS Braille specifications," he says.


The engineer, who is a college dropout, aims to bring down the price further to 
$200 which is much cheaper than the existing models. While over 15 million 
people in India fall into the category of the visually impaired, Souza says he 
wants to promote literacy among the blind. "While there are many say that 
Braille is unnecessary when there are computers which can read out text aloud, 
I think it will make these people illiterate."


Souza is a finalist shortlisted for the Third Social Innovation honours given 
by the Nasscom Foundation. The honours are a bid to recognise innovation in the 
use of information and communication technology for social development.


Like Souza, two undergraduate students from Meerut have developed a "blind 
helper" - a 7 key keyboard to help the visually challenged operate not only a 
computer but also other electrical appliances in their house using "smart-home 
extension cables".


"It is difficult for a blind person to operate a normal keyboard with 104 keys. 
Blind-helper is a Braille free technology that operates with the help of 
e-vision software using dot net technology," says Mohit Khanna, who has teamed 
up with a fellow student at the Bharat Institute of Technology.


The device has 5 navigation keys and the remaining two keys are a substitute 
for the escape and enter keys in a normal keyboard, he says. "As the system 
does not require Braille, so even a Braille Illiterate blind person can also 
use it. Also, the same system with some minor modifications can become useful 
even for paralytic people, or those with Parkinson's and even Alzheimer's 
diseases," says Khanna.


Another student team from the VES Institute of Technology in Mumbai has 
designed the project "Explore", which aims to enable the differently abled to 
educate themselves and discover the virtual world of the computer.


"Our solution helps visually impaired to educate themselves through talking 
textbooks, connect to social networking sites like Facebook etc and thus 
collaborate with the world. The software assimilates Braille keys on the 
keyboard and output is provided through speech thereby reducing the need for 
costly hardware," says Samiran Saha, who is leading the student team.


Saha says his team's innovation will be useful for government organisations to 
demographically track the literacy level of the differently abled as well as 
assist NGOs and child welfare organisations to suitably channelise their 
activities and collaborate.


Khanna and Saha figure in the 21 finalists from across India who have been 
shortlisted for the Genpact Nasscom Social innovation awards. Apart from 
individuals, several organistions that have created solutions to aid the 
visually impaired have also been shortlisted for the award which will be 
announced on February 8. 

Just one smile can change
 the world! spread more smile & see yourself the happiest person in the world! 
god bless ( please don't forget to smile )

With best regard's
Chetan Kumar.
My Skype ID:
chetansagar7

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