For nearly a century, the National Braille Press has churned out millions of pages of Braille books and magazines a year, providing a window on the world for generations of blind people.
But as it turns 90 this year, the Boston-based printing press and other advocates of the tactile writing system are wrestling with how to address record low Braille literacy.
Roughly 13 percent of U.S. blind students were considered Braille readers in a 2016 survey by the American Printing House for the Blind, another major Braille publisher, located in Louisville, Kentucky. That number has steadily dropped from around 30 percent in 1974, the first year the organization started asking the question.
Brian Mac Donald, president of the National Braille Press, says the modern blind community needs easier and more affordable ways to access the writing system developed in the 1800s by French teacher Louis Braille.
For the National Braille Press and its 1960-era Heidelberg presses, that has meant developing and launching its own electronic Braille reader last year—the B2G .
Hope it catches on. We need somebody who can read the last copy of the Bible after the apocalypse.
(Score: 4, Interesting) by Whoever on Thursday November 02 2017, @04:03AM (5 children)
Have you ever tried using a computer with a screen reader such as JAWS? It's a very frustrating experience, even if you can see the screen and use the mouse to move the pointer to the appropriate place on the screen.
Meanwhile, braille is like paper printouts. How about if people suggested doing away with printers for sighted people.
The downside of braille is that is is difficult to learn: especially to write, because it employs many contractions, which must be memorized.
(Score: 1, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 02 2017, @04:17AM
Oh God, those contractions. In addition to the 26 letters, you have 10 times that in contractions (or at least it feels like that). When I was trying to learn braille to relate to my blind family, I just could not get the knack of that. Probably because I can still see and the lack of brain plasticity means I'd need more practice. Interesting fact, studies show that the more blind you are the faster you can read braille because the Occipital lobe gets reassigned to processing tactile sensations; also, other reassignments can also allow blind people to use echolocation.
(Score: 2) by FatPhil on Thursday November 02 2017, @05:49AM
Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
(Score: 2) by chromas on Thursday November 02 2017, @06:33AM (1 child)
Yes please. Printers suck.
There used to be technology "right around the corner" to build displays with inflatable bubbles so they could have braille or raised UI elements. Haven't heard about it in many a year, though. It probably got lost with all those techs to make batteries last 10× as long or that one that lets you pee on your phone to charge it.
(Score: 2) by Whoever on Thursday November 02 2017, @03:13PM
Electronic Braille devices exist and have done so for a few years.
They are very expensive though and most blind people are poor.
(Score: 2) by pendorbound on Thursday November 02 2017, @01:25PM
The problems with JAWS aren't solved by Braille either. Braille terminals are a thing, but you still have the problem of condensing 1080p worth of pixels into 40 or 80 columns of text. Figuring out what window has focus, what part of the window to read & when, etc. The same hints that developers *can* include for screen readers would help Braille terminals, but it takes development time and is hard to get right.
Unless you have a blind person using a screen reader or Braille terminal daily during development of your app, it's unlikely you'll hint the app enough to make is useful. I'd compare it to web development in the bad old days when a dev targeted IE only and didn't care about standards or any other browser. Odds the page loaded on anything else are about the same as an app written by only sighted people being accessible to a screen reader or Braille terminal.