Hello Everyone and Happy New Year,

As the following article includes iOS apps, I am cross-posting it to both
the V iPhone and Mac Visionaries mailing list.

The URL to the original article is located at the end of the text.

Enjoy,

Mark

5 Amazing Inventions That Are Helping the Visually Impaired 
By Robert Siciliano
April 27, 2015 

In articles about leadership, we often talk about the importance of having
vision. You need an idea of where you want your company to go and how you'll
get there. You need to know the trends in your industry before they happen
in order to stay on the cutting edge.

The innovations below prove that, and then some. They're designed to help
some of the 6 million Americans who have a visual disability, making it
easier for them to go about their daily lives.

>From shoes that tell you which direction to turn to an app that makes your
iPad Braille-friendly, here are five of the coolest innovations that are
helping the blind and visually impaired.
  
1.
Shoes that guide you in the right direction
if you're walking somewhere new, you no longer need to focus on the audible
directions from your smartphone. Let Lechal shoes or insoles be your guide
instead. The insoles of the shoes connect with the corresponding app
(available for iOS, Android and Windows) via bluetooth. Then, as you walk, a
vibration will alert you when you need to turn. A buzz in your left shoe
will signal you to take a left -- the buzzing gets stronger as the turn
nears -- and a vibration in your right shoe means to turn in that direction.
If you need to turn around, both feet with vibrate at once.

While the footwear can't yet help you avoid obstructions in your path (this
feature is expected in the next model), it allows the 285 million people
around the world with visual impairments to focus more on your environment.
"Touch is such a valuable sense, and it's underused," says Krispian
Lawrence, the founder of Ducere Technologies, which makes the product. "Most
tech today that's available for the visually impaired gives them audio
feedback, but if you're visually impaired, your primary sense is your sense
of hearing, so the feedback is more of a distraction from letting you focus
on what's around you."

The shoes, which an estimated 30,000 people have pre-ordered, are expected
to start shipping early this summer. Bonus: they're also great for
navigating hiking trails.

2.
Glasses that help the color blind see color
Although they look like typical sunglasses, Enchroma Lenses help colorblind
people see all different hues. Color blindness results from spectral
overlap, which is when the photopigments (aka: light-absorbing molecules in
retinal cone cells) absorb more light than they should. Usually, of the
three types of cones in the retina, one absorbs green light, one absorbs
blue light and a third absorbs red light. If a green cone absorbs too much
red light, for example, that spectral overlap means that the person will
have a difficult time distinguishing those colors.

The good news is that in the large majority of cases of red-green
colorblindness (over 80 percent), the amount of overlap is not complete,
making it possible for the lenses in EnChroma shades to help. The exact
technological process is tricky -- it involves computer algorithms and
linear programing before the filter was even created -- but the Cliff's
Notes are that they help to separate the crossing signals between cones,
creating more color variation. This article talks more about it.
 
3.
A bionic eye
You may have seen the video of a man who sees his wife for the first time in
years through the use of the Argus II, a so-called bionic eye. Dr. Robert
Greenberg, CEO of Second Sight, worked for 25 years to make that one
recorded moment possible.

Greenberg is the man behind the Argus II, which is designed to help patients
with retinal pigmentosa -- a degenerative disease that leads to blindness --
to have some form of vision. The system received FDA approval in 2013;
Greenberg received 300 issue patents of technology in the process.

First, in an outpatient procedure, patients are implanted with a small
device that sits on their retinas. The passive device is only activated when
the patients wear the corresponding glasses, which has a camera. Then, when
the glasses are on, the signal from the camera gets turned into electrical
impulses on a patient's eye. These impulses allow the patient sees a spot of
light corresponding to what's in front of them.

Dr. Greenberg says the resulting image is low-resolution and in grayscale,
though he has figured out how to produce color and says the device could be
upgradeable. He compares it to lights on a scoreboard or pixels on a
monitor.

More than 100 people have used the device, which retails for just under
$145,000 (plus surgery and physicians fees), and the responses are
universally positive. "We hear many stories about being able to see a loved
one again and move about independently," he says.

4.
An app that points out who and what's around you
Although this is the second directional product on the list, this one is an
app that relies on audio rather than vibration. Guide Dots, the result of a
collaboration between three different teams spanning three continents, is
different in that it works with social networks and crowdsourcing sites to
provide extra information. In addition to connecting with Facebook to see
which friends are nearby, or informing you of points of interest with
geotagging, the app lets you check in to places and also responds to simple
voice commands. In 2013, the beta version of Guide Dots was shortlisted at
the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. It's free for
Android.
 
5.
An app that brings a Brailler to your tablet
Before he mentored students in a summer engineering program at Stanford
University, Sohan Dharmaraja went to the Stanford Office of Accessible
Education looking for his next idea. He found it when someone showed him a
Brailler, the laptop-sized, typewriter-esque device that people with
blindness use to write up documents.

The only direction given for the summer program was that participants had to
"do something on a tablet," so Dharmaraja thought of making a modern
brailler that can be used with today's tablet technology.

Meet iBrailler Notes. He worked with an associate professor of mechanical
engineering Adrian Lew and with Adam Duran from New Mexico State University
to create a prototype in just two months. The free iOS app -- meant only for
the iPad -- is a flat-screen brailler. By placing both hands on the tablet,
the app calibrates to put the keys under a user's fingers. To recalibrate,
the user just lifts their hands off the screen, them places them down again.
Using the standard finger combinations of a physical brailler, a user can
type notes or documents. Other features include one-click access to Google
(the search results are then read aloud with Apple's VoiceOver option) and
the ability to edit the documents using cut-and-paste. Moreover, the app can
be used to express mathematical formats, supports multiple Braille standards
and offers three different colorblind-friendly palates as well as large text
for users who retain some vision.  

As Dharmaraja told the Stanford Report, "Being born with a disability
shouldn't mean you get left out of today's technology revolution."

Original Article at:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/slideshow/245443


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