A mobile handset released today is being touted as the smallest
text-to-speech device ever created.
K-NFB
Reading Technology, a joint venture between the
National
Federation of the Blind and
Kurzweil
Technologies, aims to help blind, partially-sighted and people with learning
difficulties to 'read' text.
The software has been designed to work with
Nokia's N82
handset to create the smallest text-to-speech reading device in the world.
The software turns the phone into a pocket-sized reader, enabling users to
take a picture of most printed material and have it read back to them.
Blind users hear the contents of the document read in clear synthetic speech,
while users who can see the screen and those with learning disabilities can
easily enlarge, read, track and highlight the material.
The software makes use of the N82's large screen and 5-megapixel camera, and
combines the best available character-recognition software with text-to-speech
conversion technology.
The product includes Kurzweil's intelligent image processing software to
enhance images captured by the handset.
"The knfbREADER Mobile will allow the blind unprecedented access to the
printed word, affording a level of flexibility and capability never before
available," said Dr Marc Maurer, president of the National Federation of the
Blind.
"No other device in the history of technology has provided such portability
and quick access to printed material. This reader will make blind people
dramatically more independent."
The phone's expandable memory will allow users to store thousands of printed
pages as well as transfer files to computers or Braille note-takers.
James Gashel, vice president of business development at K-NFB Reading
Technology, who is blind, said: "The knfbREADER Mobile allows me immediate
access to printed information, whether it be a menu or a letter."
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