taken from,

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/microsofts-new-tech-for-speech-hearing-impaired/258824-11.html

Hyderabad: Microsoft India employees have developed a technology that
would help for hearing and speech impaired people to communicate with
others.

The employees have also developed a device for the blind that helps
them navigate their way to destination safely through objects in an
indoor space.

A team of employees of the company, led by Bangaru Venkatesh, said
'Kinect Bridge' technology, developed for hearing and speech impaired
people, will recognise simple finger or spelling as input and convert
the symbol into text or speech.

The technology was developed using Kinect device that detects objects
without touching.
The technology was developed using Kinect device that detects objects
without touching. It is used by Microsoft for gaming .

"Hand gestures will be recognised by the device and will be converted
as text or voice. This is useful for visually impaired people also.
They can just speak to the computer and it will be converted into
text," Venkatesh told visiting reporters at the Garage Science Fair,
an initiative that allows Microsoft's own employees to get started on
their innovative ideas, and launch their side projects.

"This is the first step. Commercialising will be taken up by
Microsoft. This is an application developed by them (employees). They
can put it up for 'moonlighting'. Microsoft has no liability on these
applications," Venkatesh added.

Besides, another team has developed - Kinectacles, an application that
helps visually impaired people to navigate on their own.

"Using a real-time scanning, the person is directed whether he should
move further or not. A built-up voice will give suggestions to the
person based on the distance between the blind person and object,"
Rishabh Varma, an associate of Microsoft India who along with three of
his colleagues

developed Kinectacles application, said.

The intention is to help visually impaired to navigate on their own
indoors without the help of other people. It has one normal VGA camera
and one depth camera, he added.

Meanwhile, MSIT's senior principal solution manager Matt Hempey said
Garage science fair, taking place on the Microsoft campus, allows
in-house inventors to brainstorm, code, test, build prototypes and
showcase their grassroots innovation to senior leaders and hundreds of
fellow Microsoft

employees.

He said over 58 teams participated in the fair and many of the
applications on display were aimed at solving real-world issues.


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