Computer: Display: Tactile
Non-Visual TV Screen   (+3)  [vote for, against]
This is an aid for the blind. Video images are expressed as moving basrelief.

Picture something like an Etch-A-Sketch, lying in your lap. You place your hands on the screen and feel the "image"...in relief, as it moves.
-- StreetLight, Jun 12 2001

(?) Non-Visual Visual Representation Research http://www.dinf.org...n_98/csun98_144.htm
Dates back to 1998 but should give people an idea of the way that research has taken. [Aristotle, Jun 12 2001, last modified Oct 17 2004]

(?) The vOICe - seeing with sound http://ourworld.com...pages/Peter_Meijer/
Converts still and moving images to sound patterns. Free software, will convert your windows desktop to sounds, and live TV too if you have a TV card for your PC. Very cool - the sounds are awful though. [imagicsp, Jun 12 2001, last modified Oct 17 2004]

Archived copy of first link above https://web.archive...n_98/csun98_144.htm
[notexactly, Jul 03 2019]

New website for second link above https://www.seeingwithsound.com/
[notexactly, Jul 03 2019]

I like it, yet it would have to be a relatively small screen. It would be impractical to move your hands to feel a moving image.
-- Malakh, Jun 12 2001


I've seen Braille dumb terminals back in the 80s when I was a student. They had about three lines of Braille and appeared to be pretty effective.

Given that this is 2001 I suspect this is baked. I'll have a search ...
-- Aristotle, Jun 12 2001


I think the use of the term "video monitor" has made people think of using this with computers. I think of this invention more in terms of TV watching. I'm not too sure anyone would want to use it to "see" what Windows looks like. I think I should have called it TV For The Blind.
-- StreetLight, Jun 12 2001


Certainly be one giant leap forward for the porn industry. Kinda like Blinkin's introduction in "Robin Hood: Men in Tights."
-- nick_n_uit, Jun 12 2001


A baked good that solves this same problem is called "Descriptive Video Service". Basically, on the Second Audio Program (SAP) of the signal, an extra narrator fills in anything a blind person is missing by speaking it. In the U.S. it is most common on non-fiction programs, particularly on the Public Broadcasting Service.
-- krelnik, Dec 17 2002


The idea will only work for people who HAVE had some time in their life where they could see. IF they were blind from birth, a moving bas relief would'nt translate into anything "visual" (they would'nt have any point of reference if they have never "seen" anything in their lives). But if it were like a braille marquee- then good. I still voted FOR.
-- mailtosalonga, Apr 01 2004


Well, it could injure someone. For instance, a car crash on TV could pinch the hands (hands stuck between virtual cars). It has to have some sort of safety thing.
-- -----, Apr 16 2005



random, halfbakery