If it is about data entry, then Braille doesn't really play much of a role does it? AFAIK, visually challenged people don't 'write' in Braille, just read. Correct me if I'm wrong please.
--Regards,
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 4:04 PM, Vickram Crishna vvcrishna@radiophony.comwrote:
Hello
The article is very clear: it is touchscreen for data entry, not reading. The device (integrated with TTS) reads out the characters as they are being typed.
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 3:43 PM, Srikanth Ramakrishnan < parakara.ghoda@gmail.com> wrote:
Gerard, Vickram, From my experience I know that Braille is a physically read language. It is read by feeling the raised dots on a surface. Eg: On elevator buttons, a series of dots on each button. I fail to understand how a touch screen display can work here. Regards, Srikanth
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 9:17 AM, Vickram Crishna < vvcrishna@radiophony.com> wrote:
On Fri, Nov 25, 2011 at 12:11 AM, Gerard Meijssen < gerard.meijssen@gmail.com> wrote:
Hoi, I do not know exactly how Braille works but if a character in a standard script can be represented by Braille characters in stead, then all it seems to need is a method for us to replace the existing Unicode character with the Braille Unicode character. As we already have WebFonts functionality it seems to me that what is needed is a conversion before the characters are send to the user. When this is done, we can show you the Braille characters on your screen.
What works for persons with visual challenges, who have been trained to use Braille typing, is the sequence of simultaneous keypresses that translate into language characters (there are Braille variants for non-Roman scripts). Since the visually challenged person cannot see the screen in any case, the display is not the point. This particular solution allows the touchscreen to accept multiple fingertip contact as individual characters, and of course, for the screen to switch smoothly between screen reading (TTS) and data entry.
When a Braille keyboard is used, what is needed is to convert the Braille sequences to whatever script / language is used before it is actually saved.
+1
I am convinced that there are many developers both in India and in the rest of the world who are able to take on this challenge and have a proof of concept in a week.
Remember it has to be integrated with the TTS used by the device. There are several out there, with different kinds of 'voices', a major one I know about being Festival (FOSS), but at the Conference, several persons referred to eSpeak. An important related piece of work is to augment the existing TTS' with Indian languages, also (for English) with Indian accents.
Thanks,
GerardM
On 24 November 2011 22:12, Pradeep Mohandas pradeep.mohandas@hotmail.com wrote:
hi,
We were happy to have people with visual challenges challenging our interactions with them. I, personally, was challenged at at least two
points
in the conference although I thought I had been sensitized for such interactions.
We do have an online feedback form for the Conference but wonder
whether we
can have more ways to reach people with visual challenges and the
aged for
feedback on how the Conference treated them and how we can improve our communication of the Conference (in future) to them.
Thank you for bringing up this point, Vickram.
warm regards, Pradeep Mohandas
User:Prad2609
Date: Thu, 24 Nov 2011 21:45:03 +0530 From: vvcrishna@radiophony.com To: wikimediaindia-l@lists.wikimedia.org Subject: [Wikimediaindia-l] Braille/touchscreen integration
Several persons attending the recent WikiConfIndia 2011 drew
attention to
the need for greater ease of use for persons with visual challenges -
Barry
Newstead referred specifically to this need, commenting that in
general,
usability improvements for persons with special needs pay off for the community at large.
This recent development at Stanford
http://www.springwise.com/lifestyle_leisure/braille-writing-software-touchsc...
describes how visually impaired persons with Braille skills can
interact
directly with touchscreen devices. What is very striking about this
solution
is that it does not involve tactile feedback, as one might expect.
Instead,
once switched to Braille mode, the screen senses multiple finger
placement
and translates that into the expected Braille codes (see the video to understand this, if you are unfamiliar with Braille typing).
To echo Barry's comments made at WCI2011, I think a certain amount of
such
out-of-the-box thinking could go a long way to creating an interface
that is
intuitively more approachable than the present wiki editor.
-- Vickram Fool On The Hill
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