[Reader-users] How far away are we from this?
Dean Anderson
danderson at wasatch.org
Mon Feb 26 11:01:43 CST 2007
Any one have a web site where we can follow progress on this? Could the KNFB reader do this one day? Dean.
Dean F. Anderson L.C.S.W.
Director, Adult Outpatient Services
Wasatch Mental Health
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>>> jmfreiss at verizon.net 2/25/2007 9:51:38 am >>>
Software is being developed to allow vision impaired people xto read
information on the digital display screens of electronic household
products and at supermarket checkouts, a Spanish company has
announced.
The DISPLAYER will allow vision impaired users to read everyday
information displays including dynamic displays, such as those on
microwaves, digital clocks, boilers and those found at public transport
stations and supermarket checkouts.
The device would ultimately take the form of software or an
application that could be installed on a smartphone or personal digital
assistant (PDA) with a built-in camera. To read something on a
display, users would hold the mobile device near it, capture an image
of it and the system would interpret and read the content aloud using
speech output technology.
"To help them capture the image of the display," said Igone Idígoras
Leibar, Principal Researcher at Robotiker-Tecnalia
(
http://www.robotiker.com/ ),
the Spanish company behind the technology. "It orientates the user
with [speech output], for example, it would say 'on the image there is
no display' or 'move the camera to the right so that the display
appears,'".
User testing with vision impaired people is due to start shortly. "Our
idea is that the end users participate [in the development], not only at
the end of the project but from the initial stages that we are now at,"
Leibar said. Tests have begun to ensure the device is usable in various
lighting conditions, carried out by over 80 people using 500 appliances
in their homes using different types of digital camera.
Last October the DISPLAYER project won the top award of 240,000
Euros in a competition run by Spain's national blindness organisation
ONCE to recognise technology research projects helping vision-
impaired people. ONCE has undertaken to test and evaluate the final
prototype, due to be ready in 2008.
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