Ah yes didn't think of sms etc

On 26 Jan 2009, at 19:53, Jacob Schmude wrote:

Hi
The only problem with having pre-rendered speech on the iPhone is that the device has way too many capabilities to be covered by any type of pre-rendered speech. It may be able to pre-render the main menus and the phone book, and your music library. Then what? Web browsing? Email? Applications? Text messaging? None of that would work, and that's what makes the iPhone worth having IMHO. Otherwise I'd just by a new wm6 phone at half the price.



On Jan 26, 2009, at 14:47, Chris Blouch wrote:

This is a demo of somebody using an iPhone without any visual feedback. From their paper they pre-rendered all the audio on a PC ala iPod Nano and downloaded the snippets to the iPhone to be used by their software.

Description:
As theuser drags their finger down the surface you can hear 'phone, music, mail' and then they make a gesture with their finger to open up the phonebook. The gesture is tapping with a second finger while continuing to point to the object to take action on. Next they drag down the surface and you hear it announce entries in the phone book. Doing the same two-finger gesture calls the name just announced. They flick straight up to go home. In mail they drag down the list and then flick left to reply to the message. In music they drag down to hear the artists and then drag right to hear songs under a particular artist. They flick right to change tracks. Double-tap to pause.

CB

David Poehlman wrote:
what is this a demo of?

----- Original Message ----- From: "Chris Blouch" <[email protected]>
To: "General discussions on all topics relating to the use of Mac OS X by theblind" <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, January 26, 2009 11:26 AM
Subject: Re: iPhone Accessibility


The Youtube demo is here:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=496IAx6_xys

There video is not described but basically the screen is blank and
everything they touch gets announced as their finger drags over the
iPhone's surface. Then a second finger is used to gesture that you want to do something with thing just announced. Slick. Wonder when this will
move out of the labs.

CB

Victor Tsaran wrote:

Also, if you search for a university research project called
"Sliderule", you may just find something interesting. There is a also
a video demoing this technology on Youtube.

On 1/9/2009 10:01 AM, E.J. Zufelt wrote:

Not sure if you all are familiar with these three articles regarding iPhone / cellular accessibility. These are courtesy of a post on another
list.

"Here is something that I saw last month about a possible solution for
the current iPhone.
http://www.engadget.com/2008/12/01/silicon-touch-an-iphone-case-for-the-visually-impaired/




Here is something that's been around for a while but doesn't seem to
have developed much.
http://www.engadget.com/2007/10/25/apple-envisions-tactility-on-touchscreen-keyboards/


http://www.engadget.com/2007/11/06/nokia-shows-off-haptikos-tactile-touch-screen-technology/



"

Thanks,
Everett












The major difference between a thing that might go wrong and a thing that cannot possibly go wrong is that when a thing that cannot possibly go wrong goes wrong it usually turns out to be impossible to get at or repair.
        --Douglas Adams




Reply via email to