New Smartphone App Gives Sight to The Blind

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 20 September 2014 18:10 IST

Jonathan Mosen, who has been blind since birth, spent his evening snapping photos of packages in the mail, his son's school report and labels on bottles in the fridge. In seconds, he was listening to audio of the printed words the camera captured, courtesy of a new app on his Apple Inc iPhone.

"I couldn't believe how accurate it was," said Mosen, an assistive technology consultant from New Zealand.

Advertisement

The new app that allows blind people to listen to an audio readback of printed text is receiving rave reviews after its first day of availability and is being heralded as a life-changer by many people.

Blind people say the KNFB Reader app will enable a new level of engagement in everyday life, from reading menus in restaurants to browsing handouts in the classroom.

Advertisement

The $99 app is the result of a four decades-long relationship between the National Federation of the Blind and Ray Kurzweil, a well-known artificial-intelligence scientist and senior Google employee. According to its website, K-NFB Reading Technology Inc and Sensotec NV, a Belgium-based company, led the technical development of the app.

Kurzweil, who demonstrated the app on stage at the NFB's annual convention in June, said it can replace a "sighted adviser".

Advertisement

Taking advantage of new pattern recognition and image- processing technology as well as new smartphone hardware, the app allows users to adjust or tilt the camera, and reads printed materials out loud. People with refreshable Braille displays can now snap pictures of print documents and display them in Braille near-instantaneously, said NFB spokesman Chris Danielsen.

The app has already given some people greater independence, users said on Thursday and Friday on social-media sites such as Twitter. One early adopter, Gordon Luke, tweeted that he was able to use the app to read his polling card for the Scottish Referendum.

Advertisement

The app will be available on Android in the coming months, Kurzweil told Reuters in an interview. He may also explore a version of the app for Google Glass, a postage stamp-sized computer screen that attaches to eyeglass frames and is capable of taking photos, recording video and playing sound.

"Google Glass makes sense because you direct the camera with your head," Kurzweil said.

Kurzweil started working on so-called "reading machines" in the early 1970s after chatting on a plane with a blind person who voiced frustrations with the lack of optical-recognition technology on the market.

A few years later, "Kurzweil burst into the National Federation of the Blind's offices in Washington, D.C., and said he had invented a reading machine," recalled Jim Gashel, a former NFB employee who currently heads business development at KNFB Reader. "It was phenomenal."

Kurzweil's first reading machine was the size of a washing machine and cost $50,000. The technology has continued to improve over the past few decades - the new smartphone app can recognize and translate print between different languages and scan PowerPoint slides up to 25 feet (7.6 meters) away - but it was not available on a mainstream mobile device until now.

Previously, it cost more than $1,000 to use the software with a Nokia cell phone and a camera.

The app's release comes at a time when the technology industry has faced criticism for being too focused on making what some deem frivolous products such as apps for sharing photos and video games, as well as for intruding into people's personal privacy.

In San Francisco, activists have blocked commuter buses operated by companies such as Google and Apple, and picketed the homes of some tech company executives for driving up the cost of living and not doing enough to help fix the city's problems.

San Francisco-based Bryan Bashin, executive director of the non-profit Lighthouse for the Blind and Visually Impaired, said the KNFB app shows the positive and profound impact that technology can have.

"There are innumerable times in life that I'll have a bit of print and there will be nobody around who can help me out, and I'll just want to know something as simple as 'Is this packet decaf or caffeinated coffee?'" Bashin said.

"The ability to do this easily with something that fits in your pocket at lightning speed will certainly be a game changer."

© Thomson Reuters 2014

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Further reading: Apple, Apple Apps, Apps, Audio, Blind, KNFB Reader
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. iPhone 17 Pro Max At Rs. 1,02,900 in Apple 50th Anniversary Sale
  2. OTT Releases of the Week (Mar 30th - Apr 5th): From Aamir Khan's Sitaare Zameen Par
  3. Infinix Note 60 Pro With Active Matrix Panel to Arrive in India on This Date
  4. Best Mobiles Under Rs. 30,000 in India
  5. Google Pixel 11 Pro XL CAD Renders Leak Online
  6. Vivo V70 FE Launched in India With 7,000mAh Battery, 200-Megapixel Main Camera
  7. Redmi Note 15 SE 5G Debuts in India With a Vegan Leather Finish: See Price
  8. OnePlus 15R Price in India Hiked Amidst Soaring Cost of Memory Components
  9. Oppo F33, Oppo F31 Pro Launch Timeline, Price Range Leaked
  10. PS Plus Monthly Games for April Revealed
  1. iPhone 17 Pro Max At Rs. 1,02,900 in Apple 50th Anniversary Sale; iPad, Watch Available With Offers
  2. Google Pixel 11 Pro XL Leaked CAD Renders Reveal Design Identical to Pixel 10 Pro XL
  3. Apple's iPhone 18 Pro Models May Not Arrive in Classic Black Finish Just Like iPhone 17 Pro, Tipster Claims
  4. Oppo F33, Oppo F31 Pro Launch Timeline, Price Range Revealed in New Leak
  5. Capcom Adds Original Versions of Resident Evil 1, 2 and Resident Evil 3 Nemesis to Steam
  6. Google's Next Fitbit Wearable Could Launch Without a Display; Said to Require Paid Subscription
  7. CFTC-FTX Settlement: Former FTX Executive Nishad Singh to Pay $3.7 Million, Faces Trading Ban
  8. Slack Upgrades Slackbot With New AI Features to Turn It Into an Enterprise Agent
  9. Australia Mandates Financial Services Licences for Crypto Exchanges Under New Bill
  10. DoT Reportedly Extends SIM Binding Mandate Till the End of 2026
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.