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I use this app and it is quite good.<br><br>
Dave<br><br>
At 03:53 PM 12/7/2012, you wrote:<br><br>
<blockquote type=cite class=cite cite=""><h1><b>A Mapping App For The
Blind Talks You Through The Neighborhood. </b></h1><br><br>
Checking in on FourSquare no longer just lets your friends (or stalkers)
know which bar to find you at. Thanks to the new iPhone and iPad app
<a href="http://blindsquare.com/">BlindSquare</a> (which builds on
similar efforts by
a<a href="http://www.fastcoexist.com/1678887/a-cane-for-the-blind-improves-social-interactions-sunday-strolls">
smartphone-equipped cane</a>), that data now helps the blind and visually
impaired navigate unfamiliar turf. By aggregating FourSquare data and
processing it through Apple’s speech synthesis program VoiceOver,
BlindSquare renders a neighborhood’s geography for the ear, as opposed
to the eye.<br><br>
App users need only pull out their device and call up the program to hear
a list of the most popular destinations in their vicinity, broken down by
categories like food, shops and services, and arts and entertainment. If
you’re in an area with a lot of restaurants, for example, the most
popular ones--based on FourSquare check-ins--would be the ones named
first by the program. (It can even open the menu and read it to you if
available.)<br><br>
The app can then give verbal instructions on how to get to any location,
using a talking compass. If BlindSquarers shake their device, they’ll
get a report on their location with the address, nearest cross street,
and the services found in different directions. Users can save their
locations to iCloud to access them from other devices, share them with
friends, or use BlindSquare to check-in on FourSquare.<br><br>
The app supports seven languages, including English, German, Spanish, and
Finnish--the last one being the native tongue of the team of creators at
the app company MIPsoft, who in the past created a transit app and a
recycling center locator for Finland.<br><br>
BlindSquare was released on the App Store in May, for $14.99. The
creators <a href="http://mashable.com/2012/06/01/blindsquare-app/">told
Mashable</a> the hefty fee is needed to license speech synthesis
technology made by the company Acapela, which lets BlindSquare turn web
text into spoken words.</blockquote></body>
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