Thursday, July 25, 2013

Trekker Breeze


By Matthew Bullis
App Details
By:  Humanware
Price:  $499
Description:  Trekker Breeze from Humanware will have you out and about within twenty minutes after you learn the layout of the unit. You can then enjoy your traveling while being guided to your destination with just the right amount of assistance from the Trekker’s all-in-one design.

With this one-handed unit plus good mobility skills, you’ll be able to do everything that commercial GPS units for sighted users do. Even though many of the buttons serve dual functions, the second function is logical and not hard to remember. You get help with both driving and pedestrian routes. You can choose to set a landmark as your destination or create a route for frequently-used places. You can check the next turn or direction with the right arrow, in case no one is sure exactly where they are going. Because GPS technology can get you from within 30 to 100 feet of your destination, you still must possess good mobility skills, whether you’re using a white cane or a guide dog. The Trekker is there to give you that extra layer of confidence while out and about. Therefore, this machine is recommended for all ages, as long as mobility skills are up to par.

There are many advantages to a simplified device like this. With only nine main buttons, you can accomplish many things through menu systems. However, with small devices come small sacrifices, such as the doubling of buttons when entering addresses. Also, only a female voice is included in this unit, which may be hard to hear in traffic. Some knowledge of the computer is required to handle transfer of the maps and other updates for the unit.

Trekker Breeze is compatible for blind, low vision, or sighted.

Pros:
  • Great way to understand the environment and your surroundings
  • Once you are familiar with the device, it is very easy to use
  • Small and extremely accurate

Cons
  • There are iPhone apps available that will essentially do the same thing
  • Highly priced
  • If you are in an unfamiliar area, such as a different state/country, you must add (upload) the new map

Wednesday, July 17, 2013

SayHi Translate


By Matthew Bullis 
App Details
By:  SayHi, LLC
Price:  $0.99
Devices:  Compatible with iPhone 3GS, iPhone 4/4S, iPhone 5, iPod touch (3rd, 4th, and 5th generation) and iPad.  Requires iOS 5.0 or later.  This app is optimized for iPhone 5.

Description:  This one-dollar app is the second one I tried for translating to other languages. The first one dollar app, called ITranslate, does the same thing, but I couldn’t get that to work with VoiceOver. This SayHi Translate app is a little bit fiddly, with a few unlabeled buttons, but they can easily be labeled with VoiceOver, once you find out what they do. Once you set the primary and secondary language, you get two buttons at the bottom of the screen. Because VoiceOver tends to speak over you when you’re trying to speak the phrase, turn off its speech with a three-finger double-tap. This turns off speech, but not VoiceOver itself, which is handy if you want to use a braille display and no speech. Tap the bottom of the screen on the left to get that button into focus for your primary language, and then double-tap. In my case, the primary language is English, and I chose French as a secondary. I speak in English, and a speech server returns an audible result in French. If I then tap the right bottom corner, then double-tap, I must speak in French, as that’s the secondary. I do so, and the speech server returns the English result. The conversation history is flickable in the top area of the screen, so you can adjust your phrasing or pace in future, if the phone doesn’t quite understanding you. This is quite a handy tool, and fun besides.

SayHi Translate is compatible for blind, low vision, or sighted.

Pros:
  • SayHi is able to translate nearly all of the most commonly used languages
  • VoiceOver compatible--unlike most other translation apps
  • Fun & handy app usable for convenience or pleasure for just $1

Cons:
  • Some of the buttons are not labeled
  • VoiceOver speech interferes with the recording, so you must disable speech by double-tapping with 3 fingers
  • There is a slight learning curve, as it takes time to get used to

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Talking Turner

By Matthew Bullis
App Details
By:  HotPaw Productions
Price:  $0.99
Devices:  Compatible with iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad.  Requires iOS 4.2 or later.

Description:  Finally, there exists an app for visually impaired musicians to check the tuning of their musical instruments. The tuners that existed before this one were hardware devices which used a needle to indicate the state of the note being played. This was no help if you can’t see at all. Many blind musicians have very good sense of pitch, though results vary with each individual. This app will tell you what note you’re near, and will say, for instance, “Note A is five cents flat.” If you increase the pitch of the note, the tuner will tell you if you’ve gone sharp or if it’s now in tune. You should wait until the note has had about a second or so to settle, as the striking of the note places it a bit higher than what it will eventually resolve to. I’ve tested this tuner app with a range of instruments: harmonicas, guitars, autoharps, mandolins, and various other stringed instruments I have at my disposal, and the tuner was able to detect notes within the full range. The autoharp for instance, has a three octave range, and other instruments have doubled strings and other overlaying harmonics and incidental harmony, such as the accordion or concertina. For one dollar, this app is extremely valuable, and was actually designed with the blind in mind.

Talking Tuner is compatible for blind, low vision, or sighted.

Pros:
  • Fully accessible with VoiceOver
  • Easy to use/navigate
  • Extremely accurate

Cons:
  • Talking Tuner has experienced some trouble with identifying extremely high notes

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Vibrating Watch from Alexandra Vision


By Matthew Bullis
App Details
By:  Alexandra Vision
Price:  $150 and up

Description:  For years in the blindness community, we’ve had talking watches and clocks. They’ve been great to keep us on track, but many have been noisier than some of us would like. Most have a bing! Noise before you hear “It’s five thirty one PM.” If someone wanted to check the time, and was wearing a wristwatch, it’s very hard to try to cover up the watch to muffle the sound of your checking the time. There have also been the “braille,” or actually tactile watches, which make checking the time more discreet, but there again, you get a click sound when you open the lid. Tissot came out with a vibrating watch about ten years ago, where you ran your fingers around the face to find the vibrations where the hands would usually be. This watch has been discontinued, but now another Swiss manufacturer has produced a line of pocket and pendant watches for discreet time telling. Press the first button to get the hour, the second for the next digit of the hour, and the third for the last. A long vibration signals five units, and no vibrations signal a zero in that position. Moving through an hour, you don’t need to hear the whole time, but maybe just press the middle button to see how close the top of the hour is. For about $150 and up, you can have this innovative way of telling the time discreetly. This reviewer chose the Meteor, which slips neatly and slimly into your pocket.

Compatible for blind, low vision, and sighted.

Pros:
  • Discreet way of checking time, without distracting sighted peers
  • Unique look and conversation starter
  • User is able to check partial time throughout the hour, such as one digit at a time, instead of needing to get the complete time announcement

Cons
  • Not at this time

Tips & Tricks:  Visit www.AlexandraVision.com

Friday, May 3, 2013

Amazon Adds New Features to Kindle App


App for Blind & Visually Impaired Users
By Matthew Bullis
Amazon recently announced the accessibility features added to their Kindle app. Previously, blind users have had to struggle with Kindles’ hardware platform. The PC Kindle program was a step forward, but you still had to use the text-to-speech voices supplied in the program itself. With the accessibility features implemented in the iPhone app now, you are able to enjoy Kindle material in any of the iPhone voices, or even with a paired braille display. Although you cannot buy Kindle books from this app, as it’s only a reader, this task is easily handled from the Amazon web site. Within the app, you must select the Cloud link to collect your Kindle materials and sync them to your i-device. Tap on a book to download it. Once the book is loaded, swipe down with two fingers and it will read continuously, with a little swish sound when it changes pages. Single tap with two fingers to start and stop reading, and three finger swipe right to go back a page, and left to advance a page. Double tap to get out of the book and into the menu to switch sections or go elsewhere in the app. Other than that, it’s pretty much straight forward, and ready to enjoy.

Friday, April 5, 2013

Walmart Makes It Easier for the Blind to Identify Medicine



By Jordan Moon

Ever have trouble remembering which prescription container was which or the directions for a certain medicine? A new prescription service designed for the blind and visually impaired shows Walmart understands.

Since June 2012, Walmart started testing a program with En-Vision America, called ScripTalk, to help those who cannot read the small print that comes standard on most prescription labels.
ScripTalk is being offered to customers with visual impairments across the country through Walmart Mail Order and in one test store in the Valley—the Christown location at 1703 West Bethany Home Road. The program is free to Walmart pharmacy customers who are blind or visually-impaired.

“Walmart is pioneering a service for the visually impaired,” Marc Ashton, CEO of Foundation for Blind Children said. “With more than 20 million Americans living with significant vision loss, it’s easy to see how many people will benefit.”

Using ScripTalk, a person hears information about the prescription , including the dose, directions and number of refills. A prescription provided with ScripTalk features an electric chip embedded in the standard print label. To hear the information on the chip, users place the prescription contained over the ScripTalk and push the "Read" button. Users can move through the information by using the "Prev" and the "Next" buttons.

“We have customers who are very, very happy with this program,” said Stefany Collins, a pharmacist at the Christown Walmart. “There are a number of people who very much benefit from the ScripTalk service.”

To order ScripTalk, a Walmart pharmacy customer must first call En-Vision America at 800-890-1180 and a device will be mailed to them, free of charge. Once the device is received, the customer lets the Walmart pharmacist know he/she wants the talking prescription label. In order to reach the Walmart Mail Order prescription service, call (800) 273-3455. Christown customers can pick up the ScripTalk device and the prescriptions with the electric chip in the store.

“Hopefully it will continue to grow so that even more people who need it can receive the service, ” Collins said.

Contact information:
Walmart - Christown location
Address: 1703 West Bethany Home Road, Phoenix, AZ 85015
PH: (602) 246-6601

Walmart Mail Order service:
PH: (800) 273-3455

En-Vision America
PH: (800) 890-1180