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BeMyEyes App, 1/27/15

Sighted Assistance From BeMyEyes

Contributed by Joel Zimba, Special Projects Coordinator

I just used BeMyEyes for the first time.  It is a straight forward utility app which connects a sighted volunteer with a blind user.  Through use of the back camera of an iPhone and the microphone, the sighted volunteer can give spoken guidance in solving a given task.

From initial startup, I was talking to someone in under 4 minutes.  Simply select whether you want to be a sighted assistant or a blind user and then sign up for the service and you are off and running.  Once you click the button to speak with the next person in the queue, the clock is ticking.  After about two minutes I had someone on the line who helped me calibrate my touch screen thermostat.

The hardest part about using BeMyEyes app is  aiming the camera with one hand while manipulating objects with the other.  With practice, I’m sure work-arounds can be found.   Of course,  getting everything in focus and the lighting just right can also be tricky.  There was a bit of initial fumbling, but eventually, we were in business.

BeMyEyes already has around ten thousand volunteers and the number is growing. This means the wait time will stay low and no single volunteer will be bombarded with requests.  Best of all, BeMyEyes is free, and we hope it stays that way.

The simplicity of this tool is made possible through the over-abundance of processing power available in mobile devices. Tossing around 2-way audio and a video feed would have been difficult just a couple of years ago.

It’s worth noting that I conducted my experiments using WIFI, and this could quickly devour your data plan, so be mindful of how you choose to connect when using this app.

 

“Loosely Speaking: An Anthology of Life with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome,” (EDS) is a collection of art, poetry, prose, and other such works, by people with EDS and their caregivers.  The goal is to share realistic, authentic experiences, to understand the hobble through life, and to give hope.  The idea is to bring the humanity into the medical lives of those with EDS.

Volume 2 of Loosely Speaking is now accepting submissions of writing, art, photography, or any other medium can be pressed into a book!

Examples of submissions for Volume 2:

-Your experience as a patient/provider/caregiver/friend/etc.

-Successes after confusing battles

-Times to let go and cope

-Frustrations with health care systems and successful workarounds

-How it feels to watch someone you care about going through life with EDS

-How it feels to be able to help (or not)

-Self-care as a provider/caregiver

-What EDS has helped you learn about your own life

-Something beautiful or bittersweet that has come of your experience with EDS

 

Submission Guidelines can be found here: https://sites.google.com/site/looselywriting/

Volume 1: http://blur.by/15kkhqq

Entries: LS.Submissions@gmail.com

 

A smart scarf that reads emotions, an ibrailler app (to start brailling on the iPad), prosthetics with a sense of touch, and much more. The future of human-centered technology is big and bright! Get a glimpse of some of it right here – AT in the news for the week of 1/19 thru 1/23

A Blind Woman Gains New Freedom, Click By Click By Click

Students AT designers! RESNA’s annual design competition is open for registration; cash prizes and more!

Maps That You Can Hear and Touch

How accessible is the Internet?

Microsoft shows off smart scarf prototype for people with disabilities

Autism Tracking Device Proposal Gets Renewed Push

Aren’t there more important things to worry about than the words we use? An essay on ableist language.

Google adds screen reader support to Docs, Sheets and Slides apps

Knowbility’s Community Heroes of Accessibility Nominations Announced

New ibrailler app turns iPad touchscreen into braillewriter

Want to invent the next big thing? Think like a kid.

New technology allows disabled children to make music using their EYES

12 Israeli Technologies Changing the Lives of the Disabled in 2015

Japanese robot a tireless aid in dementia care

Sightless get written word from new phone app

Making the Grade: Reading becomes a joy for special-needs students

New prosthetics create a genuine sense of touch to function

At 90, She’s Designing Tech For Aging Boomers

 

The Equipment Link website got a new lift! It’s now easier than ever to search and post equipment. And just in case you’d like us to do the work for you, here’s a short list of some of the newest AT listed –

Mobility, Seating, Positioning:

  • Geri Chair – Priced at $250
  • Hoyer Lift – Available for Donation

If you have questions about any of the items listed, or would like more information on how to acquire an item that’s on the site, contact us at 1-800-832-4827 or mdtap@mdtap.org.

Document Language

The natural language of every web page should be defined. This is typically done by simply specifying the appropriate language code in the lang attribute on the <html> tag (<html lang=”en”>, for example).

This WCAG 2.0 Level A requirement is vital to ensure that assistive technologies present content in the appropriate language. Consider a user that understands and has set his screenreader to read in both French and English, with French being the primary language. If he encounters an English page that does not have the language specified, it would likely be read using the screen reader’s French language settings, intonation, inflections, etc., thus making it very unintelligible. Specifying the document language ensures that it be read in the appropriate way, so long as the screen reader supports that language.

The language should also be defined for portions of a page that are not in the document’s language, such as a quotation in French found on an English web page. This is also done using the lang attribute (e.g., <div lang=”fr”>).

It’s all about emerging technology this week. And prosthetics. And medical developments. And, well, you get my gist. Grab that hot coffee and warm up next to the sweet, warm glow of progress…AT in the news for the week of 1/12 thru 1/16

i-Map, an online resource for blind/VI to build understanding of art

What can ZoomText Mac do for me that the built in OS can’t?

An off-roading wheelchair made of bike parts tackles hiking trails

Young ‘Star Wars’ Fan Gets 3-D Printed Prosthetic Arm From Stormtroopers (Video)

Robot exercise coach for the elderly: 5 other robotic helpers that make ageing easier

Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab Receives $4 Million to Develop a Retinal Prosthesis

Google partners with auto suppliers on self-driving car

Uber questioned about accessibility for disabled

BrainGate brings wireless computer mind control to paralysed people

Home sensor technology helps elderly and people with disability live independently in homes

Disabled boy learns to play piano with his eyes using virtual-reality headset

Wearable airbag designed to protect seniors when they fall

How Intel Gave Stephen Hawking a Voice

Is Uber’s Paratransit Service Anything But a PR Move?

The Voice-Activated Video Game

Tech products offer ways to track parent

Accessible Media Inc launches original weekly news and information program

The TextBlade keyboard from WayTools brings a new typing experience to the iPhone or iPad

Self-Tracking Gadgets That Play Doctor Abound At CES  

Imagining A Future When The Doctor’s Office Is In Your Home

The MyChart app is great for keeping patients & caregivers informed of their health care status

‘e-Dura’ Spinal Implant Could Make Paralyzed Walk Again: Flexible Groundbreaking Solution For Paralysis

Ai Squared Releases Window-Eyes 9 Screen Reader

Two New Apps Offer To Be The Eyes Of Blind iPhone Users

Self-stabilizing bicycle that could help struggling cyclists feel safe in the saddle

Trapped In His Body For 12 Years, A Man Breaks Free

A Device Blind Users Will Love

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