Dear Friend,

Is it also for android...

On 3/9/2018 4:22 PM, avinash shahi wrote:
Microsoft has launched an app which can help map the world for blind
and visually impaired people, giving directions, describing the local
area and guiding
them from place to place.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/2018/03/01/microsoft-iphone-app-creates-sound-map-blind-people/
The Soundscape app lets users set a beacon at their destination and
then sets off 3D spatial audio cues to give the user awareness of what
is around them.
It connects to global map services to describe places of interest or
street names.

Using a smartphone connected to a headset like Apple AirPods, it helps
blind people gain a better awareness of their location, while it can
also be used
in conjunction with other apps, like a GPS map, working in the background.
By telling users road and place names and giving directions out loud,
the app provides blind people with points of reference to make it
easier to navigate
the world, while being distinct from route guidance apps. The app is
made to be used to be in addition to navigation methods like guide
dogs.

Microsoft revealed a prototype of the Soundscape technology, including
a special headset, in 2014, but it has now released the app on
iOS
  to the public in the UK and the US.

"The app enriches your perception of surroundings as you walk, helping
you get where you want to go,"
Microsoft
said in a blog post.
Tom Wright, chief executive of Guide Dogs said Soundscape made
exploring towns and cities a more accessible experience for blind
people. "Choosing where
to go and what to do is an impossible dream. Soundscape will change
this for many people," he said.

The project was started in 2014 by Microsoft developer Amos Miller, a
product designer who lost his eye sight due to a genetic condition.
“When someone
can relate to their environment in a natural and intuitive way, it
changes their relationship with their world,” said Mr Miller.
The app has features such as "Look Ahead", that describes to users
what is ahead, which can be controlled in the settings.

The project had initially had behaved more like a map-like navigation
system, Microsoft product lead Jarnail Chudge told the Telegraph, but
the app was
changed to offer more all-round awareness.

"What people really enjoyed was that ambient awareness, so we moved to
a way-finding philosophy," Chudge said. "We focused on being
descriptive and allowed
the person in their own way to call on the information."

"We recognise this is quite different to what people have been
originally taught, and it is not meant to replace a guide dog or cane,
which is why our
partnerships are so important. We want to connect with the right group
of users. We want people to download it, play with it and give us
feedback," he
added.

Microsoft has previously worked on apps which help people with
disabilities. Last year, the hardware giant announced an app called
Seeing AI,
which used a smartphone's camera to narrate the world to users.
article end







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