The Braibook allows the visually impaired to read regular printed text!

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While the world is slowly moving towards a more inclusive future, mainstream media doesn’t really cater to people with disabilities. Regular books, magazines, newspapers, and even ebooks, for example all follow a set standard and aren’t easily available in Braille for the visually impaired to read (I fully grasp the irony as I write this article). Braibook doesn’t change the system, but introduces a product that changes the game. Designed to work like a digital highlighter, the Braibook scans text, converting them into braille for the visually impaired to read. Think about how Google Translate bridges the gap between languages and dialects… the Braibook does the same, but translates things to braille in a manner that lets the blind read regular books, newspapers, menu-cards, bills, and online articles. Cool, isn’t it?!

Designer: Alejandro Mandrion

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A Keyboard Made for the Masses

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It’s easy to look at something industrial and appreciate its chamfers and clean-edged aesthetic details. What about when you run your finger along it? It’s probably not as nice to feel. Youngdo Choi has set out to enhance the textural service the keyboard often leaves behind in the form of Braille Book – a keyboard for the visually impaired – emphasizing the sensitive feeling through one’s fingertips.

Avoiding the modern, edgy, aluminum keyboard feeling, Choi has delivered something soft and smooth to the touch, enhancing the sensory experience for the user. The rounded body is approachable and currently ties in with the same approach taken by a lot of Logitech’s latest wireless keyboards. Programmable to customize the braille keyboard aspect of this device to the user’s needs, this versatile product appeals to a much larger market than just the visually impaired of course. Soft to the touch, the powder coated ABS material used here really does make the Braille Book a pleasant device to use. The lightweight and slick appearance of the Braille Book can make this keyboard pass off as just another high-end brand – with a hidden talent.

Designer: Youngdo Choi

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Touchscreen? How about Braillescreen!

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It’s 2017. Can we please get braille phones now?! I mean just one Kickstarter project! Touchscreens are probably the WORST interface for the visually impaired, which is why we really need this to happen!

The Textura brings classy, sleek design to a phone for the visually impaired. Relying on a screen replacement surface that is made for braille (rather than conventional screens), the phone comes with a slim form factor with a large black dynamic planar surface that forms bumps to create pieces of data, much like any regular phone would. It even comes with a headphone jack so that the blind can have personalized audio feedback. And all that in a design so slick and neat, you wouldn’t even notice that this is actually a mobile phone without a screen!

Designer: Isa Velarde

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Dot: a smartwatch for the blind

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Dot is a smartwatch in braile, developed in South Korea, and especially prepared for users who can’t see and use a visual interface to read like in traditional smartwatches.

Traditional smartwatches developed for the masses were designed to display messages in a visual manner. The truth, though, is that this makes them inviable for the thousands of potential users who would be interested but have some kind of visual deficiency. For them, this kind of watch is simply not an option, which is exactly what Dot, a South Korean smartwatch, is attempting to fix.  The Dot smartwatch (both company and product share the name) has the ability to display messages in braille, configure alarms and show directions. These are very basic features for any smartwatch, but its the first of its kind aimed for the visually impaired, and the first one to attempt a dynamic braille interface.

This braille interface was developed in 4 sets of six dots using said alphabet, which go up and down so the user can “read” which dots are up and which aren’t. This display can be regulated according to the users’ proficency, and can show up to 100 “letters” per second, which is insanely fast. The point is, users can regulate this to match their skill level, which is a very welcome feature. On the other hand, this watch has a battery that lasts some 10 hours at full use, which for the average user means a full charge every 5 days or so, according to its creators. It also has a vibration function to notify the user of messages or alarms, and can connect to any smartphone via bluetooth. Creator Eric Ju Yoon Kim, who is also the CEO and co-founder at Dot, expressed that the idea behind this device was to create a “wearable” that was more intimate when it comes to how visually impaired users interact with it. He said “up until this point, if you got a message from someone on iOS, say, from your girlfriend, you have to hear Siri’s impersonal voice to read it to you.Wouldn’t you rather read it yourself and hear the voice of your loved one in your imagination?”.

Kim says that he’d also like to see Dot’s technology used in other devices such as ATMs, microwaves, or any other device that requires showing users information in order to operate them. The company behind Dot is only focusing on this smartwatch at the moment, and are trying to raise funds to make it go on sale around the world for less than $300 USD.

Be social! Follow Walyou on Facebook and Twitter, and read more related stories at Braigo Budget Braille Printer Is Made of LEGO and World’s First Braille Smartphone Helps the Blind Go Mobile.

Tactile Smart-Timepiece

Braille Smart Gear is the latest in the trend of wearable smart devices, but focuses on usability for those with sight impairments. Using a transforming Braille surface, wearers can access duplicate information from their tethered phone (such as messages, alarms, contacts, etc.) with merely a touch. In addition, wearers can make, accept and decline calls without reaching for their phone.

Designer: Jihoon Kim

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(Tactile Smart-Timepiece was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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Feel the Time

The Ehsaas (feel) watch was designed on the principal of the Braille reading system to give sight-impaired users a familiar and easy way to tell the time. Over a glass layer, an advanced electronic active polymer material raises against an overlying plastic substrate. Pixel circuits form and change with the time in the form of Braille so wearers can feel time. Vid after the jump!

Designer: Nikhil Kapoor

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Yanko Design
Timeless Designs - Explore wonderful concepts from around the world!
Shop CKIE - We are more than just concepts. See what's hot at the CKIE store by Yanko Design!
(Feel the Time was originally posted on Yanko Design)

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