[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Neues Patent zur Erzeugung von Computerbraille
- Subject: Neues Patent zur Erzeugung von Computerbraille
- From: abraxas_bEi_mail2.isys.net (Michael Lang)
- Date: Wed, 9 Apr 1997 05:48:51 +0200 (MET DST)
Das folgende ist der Abschnitt eines Artikels, der am Montag in der
New York Times erschien. Braillezeilen sind extrem teuer. In diesem
Text geht's um ein Patent, das die Firma Texas Instruments bekommen
hat. Dort wurde eine Methode entwickelt, Braille zu erzeugen. Diese
nutzt hauptsaechlich chemische Vorgaenge im Gegensatz zu unseren
Braillezeilen, in denen sich ja viel anfaellige und teure Mechanik
befindet. Die Frage ist, ob diese neue Methode tatsaechlich geeigneter
ist als die alte Piezotechnik. Mich erinnert der Text an das
Fluessigkeitstableau, das von der Uni Hagen entwickelt wurde, von
dem ich aber lange nichts mehr gehoert habe.
<*** ml ***>
April 7, 1997
Patents: Creating Braille Electronically; Glow-In-The-Dark Bubbles
By SABRA CHARTRAND
H undreds of thousands of blind Americans read by using Braille. In
1990, 4.3 million people had severe vision loss, and 512,000 of
those were blind in both eyes.
But that does not mean they can read easily. Fluency in Louis
Braille's 1825 system can be difficult without a lot of practice.
Mastering the system of one to six embossed dots arranged in two
columns of three dots each to represent letters and words requires
diligent repetition. A similar system of eight dots in two columns
of four each is used for mathematical symbols and to represent
ASCII, the generic computer code.
But many blind people cannot spend as much time reading Braille as
they might like because the "cost of Braille means it's not even
affordable to most sight-impaired people," said Marvin Cowens, a
polymer chemist at Texas Instruments Inc. Together with Alan Gilkes
and Larry Taylor, Cowens has won a patent for a display that
creates renewable, raised dots on computer monitors and other
screens.
Braille books and other printed materials are expensive to produce
and own. The printing process is costly, the bulky books require
extra storage space and the dots can begin to deteriorate after
only a few readings. Braille systems for display screens exist,
Cowens said, but they are complex machines that can cost $5,000 to
$10,000 each.
"They're a mechanical nightmare to me," he said. Cowens, whose
sight is normal, is trying now to learn Braille using the current
technology. "They rely on mechanical pegs that stick up and have a
lot of moving parts."
In addition to being expensive, the mechanical system also displays
only one line of text per screen, making it cumbersome for Braille
readers to scan a page or search for information in a document.
Yet the American Federation for the Blind says 85 percent of people
who use Braille as their primary method of reading and are Braille
literate have jobs. So Braille fluency can make a big difference in
the life of a blind or visually impaired person.
The Texas Instruments invention "consists of a matrix of small
cavities, each containing a positive and negative electrode, and
filled with a small quantity of polar organic gel responsive to
electric fields," the patent explains. A taut film is spread over
the matrix to seal the cavities and keeps each one flat.
"Each cavity is individually addressable by electronic means," the
patent continues. "When voltage is applied to the electrodes in a
cavity, the gel in that cavity expands sufficiently to raise a
dimple in the elastomeric film."
The cavities are cylindrical in shape, with metal electrodes
embedded on the floor and one side. They create dots in the
standard Braille size of 1.5 millimeter, but can be adjusted to
other sizes -- such as larger dots for those with less sensitive
fingertips. The circuitry that delivers electricity to the gel can
also cause the dots to vibrate, so letters or words can be
"highlighted." The computer can also register when dots have been
touched, so it will know when a word has been read or when to turn
a page. Users might also be able to design and customize their own
Braille systems.
The company says the displays can make word-processing, spread
sheets, graphs, CD-ROM materials, e-mail and online data bases
accessible to Braille readers. Books and other paper documents
could be scanned into a computer equipped with the Braille display.
The screen can run Braille in English or other languages. Special
software programs will command the computer to convey Braille dot
instructions, rather than the alphabet, to the screen.
Texas Instruments believes its system will help organizations,
buildings and device manufacturers comply with the Americans With
Disabilities Act. But it may be a while before the company has a
product to offer.
"We aren't selling anything yet," Cowens said of the invention. He
also did not want to guess what a Braille personal computer or
laptop display would cost consumers, other than to say it would be
"substantially less" than current systems.
"We have proved the feasibility of the system, but there's still a
lot of work to be done, he said. "We're still in the laboratory."
Cowens, Gilkes and Taylor received patent 5,580,251.