I know nothing more than what is in the article below.  This was in an Email
I received today from the National Braille Press. I thought some folks might
be interested.

 

The link to the article is at the end.

 

Now The Blind Can Read Texts On This New Braille Smartwatch

 

Giving the blind one more technological tool to make life easier

 

By Alexandra Ossola

Posted July 28, 2015

 

now-blind-can-read-texts-shifting-braille-smartwatch#

 

Touchscreens are not conducive to the blind as they cannot see the shifting
pixels on the smooth device. That has not only slowed down the technological
literacy for the blind, but has also impaired their reading literacy,
cutting them off from most information that isn't published in print. Some
tech companies have found workarounds, like having Siri read texts or
creating braille e-readers, but they are often clunky and expensive.

 

A South Korean startup company may have finally found a solution. They
created

Dot

, the first braille smartwatch, complete with shifting cells of dots. This
inexpensive gadget could help the blind catch up to the age of smartwatches,
the sales of which have increased 475 percent in the last year thanks to the
Apple Watch. But it could also be used as an educational tool.

 

"Until now, if you got a message on iOS from your girlfriend, for example,
you had to listen to Siri read it to you in that voice, which is
impersonal," Dot CEO Eric Ju Yoon Kim told

Tech in Asia

. "Wouldn't you rather read it yourself and hear your girlfriend's voice
saying it in your head?"

 

The Dot wearable looks like a cross between a Fitbit and a Pebble Time,

Alphr notes

. On its face, it has four cells each with six active dots, which can raise
or lower to make four braille letters at a time. It links up with Bluetooth
to convert text from apps like iMessage into their braille letter
equivalents with the user's voice commands. The device can last for five
days without stopping to charge.

 

One key feature of the Dot wearable is its cost. Unlike braille e-readers,
which can cost thousands of dollars, the device is slated to cost less than
$300 when it hits the U.S. market in December.

 

But Dot envisions bringing braille beyond the wrist. The inventors have
tested braille screen modules at ATMs and train stations, programming them
to display information that regularly changes, such as account balances or
train schedules. After the wearable's launch in December, the startup will
shift  towards the public sector, which it anticipates could be its largest
market.

 

http://www.popsci.com/now-blind-can-read-texts-shifting-braille-smartwatch

 

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