Wednesday, August 1, 2012

National Braille Press To Launch Affordable Braille Notetaker in 2012

HumanWare's BrailleNote Apex BT 32

National Braille Press president Brian Mac Donald told me last week that NBP's Center for Braille Innovation hopes to release an affordable, feature-rich braille note taker by year's end.

The device will have a 20-cell refreshable display, high-speed processor, 32 GBs of memory, Bluetooth, wi-fi, a camera for OCR scanning, and support Android apps.

Most significantly, if the B2G succeeds, institutions will be able to buy three for the cost of one HumanWare BrailleNote Apex ($6,379), the current industry standard pictured above.

This is great news for braille readers and a challenge to assistive technology providers. Engineering accessibility -- such as text-to-speech or voice recognition -- into mainstream products is increasingly common, but prices for adaptive solutions remain high.

Apple's iPhone includes basic features blind users would have paid extra for only a few years ago. Smart phones and tablets are changing expectations among the disabled about the price of accessibility.

A blind person shouldn't have to pay 10 times the price of the iPad2 just to communicate and surf the web. NBP hopes to bridge this price- and accessibility gap, which, when you think about it, is sublimly disproportionate.


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