Showing posts with label Headsets. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Headsets. Show all posts

Friday, February 24, 2017

Sharp vision: New glasses help the legally blind see


SAN FRANCISCO — Jeff Regan was born with underdeveloped optic nerves and had spent most of his life in a blur. Then four years ago, he donned an unwieldy headset made by a Toronto company called eSight.

Suddenly, Regan could read a newspaper while eating breakfast and make out the faces of his co-workers from across the room. He’s been able to attend plays and watch what’s happening on stage, without having to guess why people around him were laughing.

“These glasses have made my life so much better,” said Regan, 48, a Canadian engineer who lives in London, Ontario.

The headsets from eSight transmit images from a forward-facing camera to small internal screens — one for each eye — in a way that beams the video into the wearer’s peripheral vision. That turns out to be all that some people with limited vision, even legal blindness, need to see things they never could before. That’s because many visual impairments degrade central vision while leaving peripheral vision largely intact.

Although eSight’s glasses won’t help people with total blindness, they could still be a huge deal for the millions of peoples whose vision is so impaired that it can’t be corrected with ordinary lenses.

Eye test

But eSight still needs to clear a few minor hurdles.

Among them: proving the glasses are safe and effective for the legally blind. While eSight’s headsets don’t require the approval of health regulators – they fall into the same low-risk category as dental floss – there’s not yet firm evidence of their benefits. The company is funding clinical trials to provide that proof.

The headsets also carry an eye-popping price tag. The latest version of the glasses, released just last week, sells for about $10,000. While that’s $5,000 less than its predecessor, it’s still a lot for people who often have trouble getting high-paying jobs because they can’t see.

Insurers won’t cover the cost; they consider the glasses an “assistive” technology similar to hearing aids.

ESight CEO Brian Mech said the latest improvements might help insurers overcome their short-sighted view of his product. Mech argues that it would be more cost-effective for insurers to pay for the headsets, even in part, than to cover more expensive surgical procedures that may restore some sight to the visually impaired.

New glasses

The latest version of ESight’s technology, built with investments of $32 million over the past decade, is a gadget that vaguely resembles the visor worn by the blind “Star Trek” character Geordi La Forge , played by LeVar Burton.

The third-generation model lets wearers magnify the video feed up to 24 times, compared to just 14 times in earlier models. There’s a hand control for adjusting brightness and contrast. The new glasses also come with a more powerful high-definition camera.

ESight believes that about 200 million people worldwide with visual acuity of 20/70 to 20/1200 could be potential candidates for its glasses. That number includes people with a variety of disabling eye conditions such as macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy, ocular albinism, Stargardt’s disease, or, like Regan, optic nerve hypoplasia.

So far, though, the company has sold only about 1,000 headsets, despite the testimonials of wearers who’ve become true believers.

Take, for instance, Yvonne Felix, an artist who now works as an advocate for eSight after seeing the previously indistinguishable faces of her husband and two sons for the first time via its glasses. Others, ranging from kids to senior citizens, have worn the gadgets to golf, watch football or just perform daily tasks such as reading nutrition labels.

Eying the competition

ESight isn’t the only company focused on helping the legally blind. Other companies working on high-tech glasses and related tools include Aira , Orcam , ThirdEye , NuEyes and Microsoft .

But most of them are doing something very different. While their approaches also involve cameras attached to glasses, they don’t magnify live video. Instead, they take still images, analyze them with image recognition software and then generate an automated voice that describes what the wearer is looking at — anything from a child to words written on a page.

Samuel Markowitz, a University of Toronto professor of ophthalmology, says that eSight’s glasses are the most versatile option for the legally blind currently available, as they can improve vision at near and far distances, plus everything in between.

Markowitz is one of the researchers from five universities and the Center for Retina and Macular Disease that recently completed a clinical trial of eSight’s second-generation glasses. Although the results won’t be released until later this year, Markowitz said the trials found little risk to the glasses. The biggest hazard, he said, is the possibility of tripping and falling while walking with the glasses covering the eyes.

The device “is meant to be used while in a stationary situation, either sitting or standing, for looking around at the environment,” Markowitz said. –Michael Liedtke

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Let’s get loud–without earphones


Music has become ubiquitous, and nowhere is this more apparent than in the tunes stored in our smartphones and MP3 players. Thousands of songs are available at the touch of a finger, and more can be accessed via the Internet through streaming services or YouTube.

We generally keep the songs to ourselves, the acoustic goodness enjoyed as a solo affair through earphones.

As a result, a certain sense of community has somehow been lost in time—the convenience of portability overwhelming an age-old tradition of listening, for example, to one’s album collection with friends on a bulky boombox.

But even the most powerful of mobile phone speakers can’t hold a candle to a good personal stereo or laptop to play music.

SuperTooth Disco 2

Then again, technology has filled the void by way of portable Bluetooth speakers. The latest and perhaps one of the best to be made available in the country so far is the SuperTooth Disco 2.

SuperTooth is a brand known for its line of portable Bluetooth speakers and accessories. The Disco 2 represents its most portable effort yet to amplify the sounds that we play on our phones and laptops.

At first glance, the Disco 2 immediately attracts, bearing an understated hourglass figure design—a refreshing look compared to the more gaudy and flashy speakers that we see in store shelves at the malls. It’s a bit heavier than other portable Bluetooth speakers, but this is explained by the 16-watt power output.

Unfortunately, the speaker can’t be charged via USB, and instead needs a 14-volt adapter that you have to carry around. But thankfully it comes with a carrying case.

Setting up the Disco 2 is very easy, requiring only a single-button press on the speaker itself, and a usual Bluetooth pairing with our phone. This is a great change from portable speakers with tangling wires, and finicky early Bluetooth speakers that took ages just to pair with a phone.

If needed, though, the Disco 2 still has a good old-fashioned 3.5-millimeter audio jack that can be used to connect to a laptop or an older music player that doesn’t have Bluetooth.

The sound it produces generates no less a good impression. Its maximum volume can fill up a medium-sized room; appropriately powerful bass and good midrange characterize its sound reproduction. But the higher treble ranges are drowned out past the Disco 2’s medium volume setting, and the entire unit rattles and distorts when the bass gets really heavy.

When testing the Disco 2, we also discover that the range is exactly as SuperTooth describes it—a good 10 meters. We are able to transmit audio to the Disco 2 even through concrete walls, though, of course, this noticeably lowers the range.







The connection it keeps with the phone is reliable, though one time, a strange, stuttering sound is heard for a few seconds.

The Disco 2 is not just your average, throwaway wireless speaker system. It’s a well-designed piece of audio equipment that breaks your music free from the personal tethers of earphones, while not being cumbersome, like having a laptop or large wired speaker setup will.

It brings back the wonderful experience of listening to music with friends, perfect for small gatherings or group parties.

Log on to www.supertooth.com.ph  and follow SuperTooth on Facebook (www.facebook.com/SuperToothPH)

Dancing with myself

THE FIRST time I got hold of the SuperTooth Disco 2 stereo speaker, I couldn’t figure out how to operate it, even with a manual.

That’s what happens to a 50-year-old geezer like me, who, despite having been a music fanatic all my life, still don’t know how to download a song on my smartphone—not entirely due to ignorance, but because I prefer listening to it without earphones.

Somehow I feel sad, disturbed even, when, for instance, I see people riding the MRT looking oblivious to everything around them as they get lost in the privacy of hearing their downloaded songs through headsets on their phones. Although I get curious when they start nodding their heads or tapping their feet, they end up looking stupid when they start singing loudly along to the lyrics of a song that has been muted from the outside world by their headsets.

Perhaps the good thing about the whole scene is that the rest of humanity in the train is spared of the atrocity of hearing what might turn out to be a lousy-sounding song, if it’s played through loudspeakers.

But back to the Disco 2. I had to seek the assistance of Anton, the 22-year-old techie son of a friend, to operate the portable wireless speaker, which, it turned out, needed to be fully charged to appreciate its optimum performance. That would take some two hours of plugging its adapter to an electric socket.

That’s about the only “hassle”; otherwise, it took just a few seconds to “pair” the Disco 2 to his smartphone. When Anton successfully turned the Disco 2 on with a Miles Davis tune from the legendary trumpeter’s 1969 album, “In a Silent Way,” the sound was rich and full, swirling and enveloping the den of the house of Anton’s grandparents at No. 13 Mayaman St. in UP Village, Quezon City.

When I took the Disco 2 to my apartment and plugged it into my laptop, I discovered that the audio playback’s quality depends on how the song was uploaded; if for example, the tune is from an HD (high-definition) audio clip from YouTube, then it’s guaranteed to give a splendid sound.

After listening to a “full album, stereo remastered” version of the Beatles’ 1965 album “Rubber Soul” from YouTube on the Disco 2, the more I was convinced that nothing beats music played on a speaker.

Now I’m looking for a good-quality version of Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky” and Bruno Mars’ “Treasure” to download, to test whether the Disco 2 is appropriately named.

In any case, I won’t mind dancing with myself. Pocholo Concepcion

source: lifestyle.inquirer.net