Aipoly Vision Wins the Best of Innovation Award at CES2017
First things First: Android
Helios is Using 3D Cameras to Assist People with Visual Impairments
a Bucharest-based Innovator, Silviu-Tudor Serban and his team have designed Helios, which uses Intel® RealSense™ 3D cameras to give those with severe visual impairments a clearer view of the world. And for those with total blindness, Helios features like reading assistance, facial recognition, and a haptic interface provide a much enhanced sense of their surroundings.
CooperVision is Rolling Out its Biofinity Energys Contact Lenses at CES This Week.
CooperVision is unveiling a new kind of contact lens designed for people who stare at a digital screen for two or more hours a day.
Smartphones Can Now be Charged Using the Power of HandEnergy
HandEnergy allows users to charge the battery on their phone simply by rotating their hand.
Vision Testing Kit Puts an Eye Doctor in Your Pocket
What sets it apart from other smartphone-based eye exam kits – such as the SVOne by New York-based Smart Vision Labs, and Peek – is that it is designed for frequent consumer use.
Video Games Will Not Have to Meet Accessibility Standards for at Least Another Year
The FCC Consumer and Governmental Affairs Bureau has granted the Entertainment Software Association’s (ESA) request to extend the class waiver of the FCC’s accessibility rules to video game software through Jan. 31, 2017, but will require a progress report halfway through that waiver period.
RAZ Mobility, Announces Launch of Accessibility Application Installer App
The app provides users a simple way to discover the benefits of Android accessible apps.
Visually Impaired Students Now Have a New Outlook on Learning
It’s called Osmo – a program that blends the physical and digital worlds.
Google Maps Rolls Out Wheelchair Accessible Locations Feature
GOOGLE Maps has introduced a cool new feature recently in their latest update making easier for those with accessibility needs.
The maps application is now wheelchair friendly, thanks to a team of Google employees who worked on the update in their spare time in a bid to make the world more accessible.
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