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EyeRing Could Help Blind People See Objects

cylonlover writes "Generally speaking, the vast majority of augmented reality applications that enhance the world around us by overlaying digital content on images displayed on smartphone, tablet or computer screens are aimed squarely at the sighted user. A team from the Fluid Interfaces Group at MIT's Media Lab has developed a chunky finger-worn device called EyeRing that translates images of objects captured through a camera lens into aural feedback to aid the blind."

18 of 31 comments (clear)

  1. Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by icebike · · Score: 2

    Somebody send Geordi La Forge over there to straighten those people out.
    Nobody is going thru life poking their finger every which way, even blind people realize how dumb that looks.

    Hell even Google's got the camera on glasses figured out, and you can do a earbud or cochlear implant if you still insist on doing sound waves.

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    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  2. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by jhoegl · · Score: 2

    RTFA shows that it is for reading not for walking down the street.
    It uses a camera, an android app, OCR, and text-to-speech technology to aid the blind.

  3. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by jhoegl · · Score: 1

    Crap... I guess it can be used for that.
    So much for my speed reading skills.
    Anyways, complaint still invalid, as this is a prototype. No reason it couldnt be mounted elsewhere.

  4. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by Meshach · · Score: 2

    Somebody send Geordi La Forge over there to straighten those people out. Nobody is going thru life poking their finger every which way, even blind people realize how dumb that looks.

    Hell even Google's got the camera on glasses figured out, and you can do a earbud or cochlear implant if you still insist on doing sound waves.

    The article says that these are just a proof of concept: tight now the device only can identify currency, text, pricing information on tags, and colors. The idea is that it can be used to develop the glasses to give the blind information about their surroundings.

    --
    "Maybe this world is another planet's hell"
    Aldous Huxley
  5. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by icebike · · Score: 3, Funny

    I read TFA, its still a clunky, hackerish and unrealistic approach. There is far better technology out there, and I;m no longer impressed just because someone managed to use Android.

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  6. OCR? by Dwedit · · Score: 2

    This sounds like the perfect opportunity to throw in OCR. Recognize a printed sheet of paper, or anything else with words on it, then read it back to someone, or do something else with the text. Perhaps even translate it. Maybe even someone who isn't blind could benefit from that.

    1. Re:OCR? by MacBurn11 · · Score: 1

      I bet you could find some random rightsholder that would try to sue you for that...

  7. Awesome by Lord+Lode · · Score: 1

    As computer vision and hardware evolve, life might get better and better for the blind. That is, until bionic eyes become a possibility :)

    1. Re:Awesome by danlip · · Score: 1

      Bionic eyes already exist and are tested in humans. The resolution sucks (less than 600 pixels) but I could see a hybrid solution - 600 pixels could easily be enough to aim the camera where you want, blink, and then the external camera and software could use OCR to read the text to you.

  8. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by inputdev · · Score: 1

    I read TFA, its still a clunky, hackerish and unrealistic approach. There is far better technology out there, and I;m no longer impressed just because someone managed to use Android.

    I concur - especially when they really should simply be using the phone itself - I don't see how adding an accessory (camera + bluetooth) is any better than holding the phone.
    also - I thought it was pretty funny that the only information the guy used to buy a shirt was that it was gray and $27.

  9. Re:Sick of wasting resources on inferior people by marcmcn · · Score: 2

    Is your society in the jungle? If we are part of the same society, which I think we are, it seems the more we can create to assist others in our society the greater the return in: research, technology, investments, job growth. In our society we do have moral and ethical character that makes our lives have more personal value when we help others. A capitalist doesn't doesn't see "inferior people", they see opportunity, good or bad it all gets shared with society in one form or another. And yes, I get your point about living in a Darwinian way, but we do not live in a utopian society that I am aware of.

  10. Or on the back of your head... by slew · · Score: 2

    Targetting the blind with this kind of product misses the bigger audience that might want to have eyes on the back of their head...

    For example, I'm sure the police, military or the even firemen would be interested in something like that, then they can amortized the development costs to provide a version for blind folks pointing forward at an even lower cost.

    Someday, maybe even sharks will be interested in it (when they get that version with the embedded laser)...

    1. Re:Or on the back of your head... by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      Wild Bill Hickok would've killed for that sort of tech...

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      #DeleteChrome
  11. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by SourceFrog · · Score: 2

    Until they walk into a McDonalds. We're going to see a lot of blind people beaten up.

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    My other UID is three digits.
  12. Re:Sick of wasting resources on inferior people by PPH · · Score: 1

    you are a flawed individual and in the jungle, you would not survive.

    Bet you didn't even see that predator sneak up behind you and sink his '-1 Flamebait' fangs into your ass.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  13. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Nobody is going thru life poking their finger every which way

    It's standard commuting behavior around here.
     

  14. Eye ring? Ow. by chinton · · Score: 1

    And I thought a nose ring sounded painful... Yikes.

  15. Re:Chunky Finger? No, Damit, we want visors by Tokah · · Score: 1

    Actually, there's good reason for using something that slips on a finger. Aiming a camera at something you can't see with your head would be a lot of trouble. Exploring things by touch is much easier and more accurate. Take the price tag reader, how would you know if the tag it was reading was attached to the shirt you were considering without feel? It could be reading the price for a different product right next to it. Until we can read data straight into our visual cortexes, I think a smaller version of something like this will beat out geordi's visor.