KASARGOD: Nalin Sathyan has successfully hidden his other identity --
Nalin.x.Linux -- for long. He is as obscure as his home, a two-bedroom
blind teacher's quarters hidden by outgrown grass on Seethangoli Road
at Vidyanagar in Kasargod.

 Only five persons, including his family of four, know Nalin has been
participating in the Google Summer of Code (GSOC) for the past two
years, winning $5,500 each season (`6.76 lakh) as stipend from the
technology giant at Mountain View, California. However, the anonymity
of Nalin.x.Linux is restricted to the physical world.

In the world of free software, his one product -- IBus-Sharada-Braille
-- is downloaded 100 times every week. "For me the recognition came
when Google FedExed me the G-Soc T-shirt," says Nalin, who is awaiting
results of BSc Computer Science and has an internship offer from
Google.

Asked why he did not prefer an engineering college, Nalin said, "I
could not make the cut because my Maths marks were low in Plus 2." The
green and red GSOC T-shirts from 2013 and 2014 hang on his wall. That
also partially explains why he did not want to share his achievements
with his college.

For him, his guru is his blind father, Sathyaseelan K, an English
teacher at Government School for Blind, at Vidyanagar, here.

"My father is the brain behind IBus-Sharada-Braille," said Nalin. He
he named the software after his mother. All Indian languages have more
than 50 letters. IBus- Sharada-Braille reduces the number of keys in a
keyboard to six, a lift from Braille, to type in any of the languages.
"Since Braille dots are based on phonetic, once you master it, you can
type in any language," says Nalin.

Some of his friends are already using it to type in Malayalam, Hindi,
Tamil, English and Spanish. The software also makes typing very fast.
For example all the six keys pressed together will produces the word
"for". "Till now people with sight contributed to help the blind.

This is the first time Braille is being used to help those who can
see," says Sathyaseelan, who brought his Braille expertise to the
table to help Nalin write the code. Nalin says with modifications, the
software can be used in touch phones. Anivar Aravind, a technology
consultant said till now a blind person had to affix another input
device, often expensive, to use computers.

 "IBus-Sharada- Braille changes that. Now a blind person can use the
keyboard to write or enter data." The product has already been
accepted into the Debian repository, which vouches for its standard.

Source:
http://www.newindianexpress.com/states/kerala/Coding-Champion-Blind-Father-Parse-Braille-Make-Typing-Easy/2014/10/08/article2467182.ece



-- 
Habeeb C.
Vice President Kerala Federation of the Blind.

Assistant Professor of English
Centre for advanced studies and research in English Language and Literature
Farook College.
Calicut.
Phone. 09946265483.
Email. [email protected]
Skype Id. habeebc3

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