Mon Oct 27, 2008 11:47AM EDT
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Getting around the world when you can't see a thing can't be easy. Just imagine walking into a restaurant and trying to figure out what to order. It's a simple act for most of us (well, except for my wife), but imagine how tough it must be for the blind. Never mind deciding between the steak and the pork chop, they can't read the menu at all.
Enter KNFB Reading Technologies, which sells software originally invented by futurist Ray Kurzweil and which lets the blind "see" the world around them through the magic of text-to-speech translation. The software loads on a cell phone, and it works by simply taking a snapshot with the cell phone camera. Just point it at a book, a sign, or, yes, a menu, and the phone translates any words it sees into spoken audio, which are played back through the cell phone's speaker (or, more conveniently, an earpiece).
Kurzweil has been working on the "reading machine" since 1976 (Stevie Wonder was his first customer), and over 30 years later technology has advanced to the point where it can be stowed inside a common cell phone. The current price: $2,145, including the phone (a Nokia N82). In addition to translating photographs into spoken audio, it also audio-fies GPS information, reads web pages, and even tells you whether you're holding a one dollar bill or a twenty.
The company hopes to see applications extend beyond the blind (though with 1.3 million people in the U.S., that's a huge audience), with future versions targeted at dyslexic readers, translating printed material from foreign languages, and eventually a speech-to-speech translator, where you can say something into the phone in English and have it come out the other side in Hungarian.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
NICE! This is excellent! I am surprised that the L&H conglomerate that practically holds a stranglehold on all speech related technological developments has not squashed this like a bug yet!
Wow ....Kurzweil is impressive, this is over the top!!!! How long will it take before we find an equivalent open-source app?????
This would be a great app for the iphone.
I think that technology has certainly come along way and I applaud the people for working tirelessly on such inventions but the price is steep for the average "moe" most blind/handicap individuals are on a limited income so what proposal has the company that created such a wonderful gadget come up with to help these individual's not everyone is a Stevie Wonder( no pun intended to the artist).
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1 Posted by gooddayz39 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:11PM EDT Report Abuse
Awesome display of how technology is going to help the human race overcome it's differences and join in a global effort for peace and prosperity! Next stop the solar system!