Braille texting app could have broader appeal


Designed for the visually impaired, an open-source app out of Georgia Tech
could prove to be a texting tool for the masses.

Most of us have at least tried to text without looking at our phones before.
I confess to having shot off a quick message while stopped at a red light,
or immediately following crazy goals and tackles at soccer matches, or even
from the confines of my pocket at parties.

 

The prototype app BrailleTouch is currently undergoing usability studies.

Now a free, open-source app called BrailleTouch
<http://www.gregoryabowd.com/research/projects/brailletouch>  is about to
make this form of multitasking that much easier--for the visually impaired
and sighted alike.

Designed at Georgia Tech, the app incorporates
<http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2012-02/giot-gtd021712.php>  the
Braille writing system into a touch-screen device. It essentially turns an
iPhone <http://reviews.cnet.com/iphone/> 's touch screen into a soft-touch
keyboard programmed for Braille, thus requiring only six keys, that converts
gestures into input points.

By using the six-key Braille configuration, the keyboard actually fits on
the touch screen, allowing users to hold their devices with their palms,
thumbs, or pinkies while the screens face away from them.

"BrailleTouch is an out-of-the-box solution that will work with smartphones
and tablets <http://reviews.cnet.com/tablets/>  and allow users to start
learning the Braille alphabet in a few minutes," Mario Romero
<http://www.cc.gatech.edu/%7Emromero/> , the project's principal
investigator, said in a news release. "It also reduces the need for
expensive proprietary Braille keyboard devices, which typically cost
thousands of dollars."

A few like-minded concepts are popping up, including the similar (but $4.99)
TypeInBraille
<http://itunes.apple.com/th/app/typeinbraille/id474798075?mt=8>  app just
released by EveryWare Technologies and an
<http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-20118728-1/tablet-app-brings-new-touch-
to-braille/>  8-key version developed by students at Stanford that follows
the location of the user's fingers.

Whether the masses will take the time to learn to type the Braille alphabet
(Romero says they don't have to learn to read it, and that people can learn
to type it in a matter of minutes) remains to be seen, but those who do may
eventually find that they are able to type up to 32 words per minute with 92
percent accuracy, according to early studies with visually impaired
participants proficient in Braille typing.

The app has already won the <http://www.gvu.gatech.edu/node/5320>  MobileHCI
2011 competition for design in Stockholm, in the fall of 2011. The Georgia
Tech team has developed iPhone and iPad versions of BrailleTouch and says
Android <http://www.cnet.com/android-atlas/>  versions are next.
BrailleTouch is currently being demonstrated at the Abilities Expo-Atlanta
2012 this weekend.


Read more:
<http://news.cnet.com/8301-27083_3-57380668-247/braille-texting-app-could-ha
ve-broader-appeal/#ixzz1ngDXwZvb>
http://news.cnet.com/8301-27083_3-57380668-247/braille-texting-app-could-hav
e-broader-appeal/#ixzz1ngDXwZvb

 

Amit Sanghvi

Father of Aayushi Sanghvi


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