"Reaction [beta]"

Easy Walk: Guide dogs meet their nemesis 21 Mar 2007

BBC News has an interesting report on Easy Walk - a pioneering GPS satellite system created by Il Village that gives blind people greater independence and mobility:

"Easy Walk uses a mobile phone that runs the Symbian operating system, a small Bluetooth GPS receiver, text to speech software called Talks (though rival products are also compatible) and a call centre that will operate around the clock seven days a week.

"It requires just two dedicated keys on the mobile phone - one which, when pressed, tells the user their exact location including the house or building number and the other one alerts the call centre that the person needs assistance with navigation.

"An operator will then call the blind person, find out where it is they need to go and stay on the line with them providing step by step instructions."

Easy Walk is currently being tested by a group of 30 people from the Italian Blind Union. If these tests prove successful, the product will be launched to blind and partially-sighted people in Piedmont in autumn.

Next article: Polaroid, polaroid on the wall...
Previous article: Microsoft's pay-per-search plan

Bookmark this page

Add this page to your list of social bookmarks.

1 comment so far

Ben 21 Mar 2007 02:54 PM

While its nice that you can call an operator for help, it does sounds like an admission that the technology doesn't work very well. Guide dogs can get by without this luxury, which probably makes them a more robust solution. I'd like to see the two "technologies" compared though.

Send page to a friend

Enter your email address to subscribe to our free newsletter.
Your email address will never be sold or given out to anybody.