Pocket.info - Mobile 2.0
Mobile Web 2.0 News, Views, and Developer Community


Browse by Tags

  • Blind Japanese man creates vibrating Braille handset

    Raised Braille-bumps on handset keypads are good for dialing a phone number and other simple tasks, but it can be a little more demanding to tap out text messages or do anything more complex by feel alone. To help the blind get more out of their mobile phones, Nobuyuki Sasaki, a former Tsukuba University [...]
  • Former professor creates vibrating Braille handset

    Filed under: Handsets , Others Braille phones in and of themselves aren't all that unique , but a former professor (who just so happens to be completely blind) from Tsukuba University of Technology has crafted a variant that jumps and jives. Dubbed the world's first vibrating Braille cellphone, the device is programmed to emit pulses depending on which key is pressed; more specifically, a pair of terminals attached to the handset "vibrate at a specific rate to create a message." Those currently involved with the project are now toiling to make the keypad-to-vibration converters smaller, but there's no word just yet on whether the technology will be picked up commercially. [Via FarEastGizmos ] Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
  • Vmedia aside, Spice planning ultra-cheap phones, too

    Filed under: Handsets , Others , GSM We'd personally spend the extra few bucks to pick up the MOTOFONE's e-ink display, but mad love to Spice for what they're trying to do here nonetheless. The Indian carrier announced a couple other handsets in addition to its crazy Vmedia disc-playing prototype at Mobile World Congress last week, both of which will retail for under $20. "The People's Phone" (which we hope is less painful than The People's Elbow) is about as simple as they come, forgoing a display altogether in an effort to really boil it down to the basics, while The Braille Phone appears to be virtually the same thing with braille simply added to the keys. It seems unlikely that the models will find their way too far outside India proper, though they sure would make interesting backup phones, wouldn't they? [Via textually.org ] Read | Permalink | Email this | Linking Blogs | Comments
  • Apple patent filed for tactile touchscreen - raised, indented keys

    Apple’s been on a touchscreen kick recently. Following on their previous pressure-sensitive touchscreen patent application filings with the USPTO , Apple has again filed for another patent regarding a touchscreen interface. The newest patent filing, titled “ Keystroke tacility arrangement on a smooth touch surface ,” reveals Apple’s interest in haptic touchscreen feedback - by which some physical feedback is used to confirm touchscreen inputs. LG and Samsung are using vibration-based haptic feedback systems in their newest handsets, but vibration-feedback is a compromise at best. Apple’s system proposes physical alterations to the touchscreen itself - raised, Braille-like bumps emerging from beneath the screen; or having actual keyboard keys rise up through the flexible touchscreen; or even placing depressed regions under the screen to represent keys - allowing the user to feel the keyboard key indents without physically seeing them. We’ll have to wait and see where and if Apple implements such technologies - perhaps in conjunction with a pressure-sensitive touchscreen. It looks like Apple has not only spurred the touchscreen interface as the future, but is seriously looking to stay ahead of the competition with innovative new tech. Apple could turn haptic feedback on its head with any of these proposed ideas - and really pave the way for touchscreen tech to secure its position as the future of UI inputs. Keep ‘em coming, Apple. [Via: Unwired View ] ---Related Articles at IntoMobile:Apple files for second pressure-sensitive touch display patentNokia files for patent application for "no-look" touchscreen controlsApple files patent application for pressure-sensitive touchscreen technologySony Ericsson files for patent on programmable touchscreen keypadApple iPhone: Anti-Theft Feature Revealed in Apple Patent
Copyright 2008 - Pocket.info