Biped.ai - a smart CoPilot for the blind and visually impaired

By Assistive Inte…, 21 June, 2024

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Assistive Technology

\Disclosure:
I have no useful vision. I use a cane now but have previously been a guide dog owner. I use the ‘Look and Tell’ feature on my Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses every day and bought, used, and return the Seleste glasses. Finally, I have paid the $100 deposit for the Glide and feel confident I will make the full order later in the summer.

OK, now that is out of the way, I learnt today about what, to me, seems like a lot of changes in the world of BIPED. I’ll summarise what they have to say for themselves below.

“Navigating the world as a blind or visually impaired individual can be challenging. Traditional tools like white canes and guide dogs are invaluable, but advancements in technology are opening new avenues for enhancing mobility and independence. Enter Biped AI, an innovative solution designed to transform how blind people navigate their surroundings using artificial intelligence.
Biped AI offers an advanced mobility harness named NOA, engineered to make travel safer and more intuitive. Imagine a mini-Tesla on your shoulders, guiding you through your environment with the precision and intelligence of a self-driving car. This is the future of mobility that Biped AI is bringing to the present.

What is NOA?
NOA is an all-in-one AI mobility solution that you wear on your shoulders. It’s equipped with ultra-wide-angle cameras, a small computer, and a battery, all strategically placed for optimal performance. These components work together to provide real-time obstacle detection, precise GPS navigation, and detailed scene descriptions.

Key Features of NOA
1. Obstacle Detection: One of the standout features of NOA is its ability to detect obstacles at various levels. Whether it's a low-lying hole, a head-level branch, or an electric scooter parked on the pavement, NOA’s cameras scan a 170-degree field from head to floor, day, and night. Using AI, it identifies these potential hazards and alerts you through spatial audio feedback played via bone conduction headphones, ensuring your ears remain free for other sounds.
2. GPS Navigation: NOA doesn’t just stop at obstacle detection. It offers precise outdoor navigation with GPS, guiding you turn by turn to your destination. Indoors, it helps you identify open areas and navigate through corridors, making it easier to find your way around buildings.
3. Scene Description: Ever wondered what your surroundings look like? With NOA, you can get a full, precise description of the scene. By pressing the 'AI button' on the right side of the device, you receive an auditory description of the environment, helping you visualize your surroundings in detail.”

Mobility is a very personal thing and we will all have to make up our own minds and choose and use what is right for us. I do think technology will come to mobility one day, but not today. I will know it when I see it and Biped.ai or NOA, isn’t it. Or should I say – it isn’t it for me.

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Comments

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

Cane, dog and naked - I was told 'naked' is for folks with a lot of useful vision who need a 'helping hand' sometimes.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

Almost three times more than Glidance at the full price. I am paying £800 for Glidance, this year - a year before launch.

By inforover on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

I've also put down the deposit for glidance. I think the thing is with glidance that nothing else has is the fact it makes contact with the ground. Although NOA and other such devices, like Dot Lumin look great, nothing quite beats that assurance of contact on the ground. I think we'll get there but there needs to be a culture shift within the blind community for us to trust anything that is whereable and not on the ground.

By mr grieves on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

Whereas I agree that having something in contact with the ground is likely to make for a better experience, the thought of going out and relying entirely on any technology makes me feel very nervous.

A cane is relatively cheap and disposable. If a cyclist runs over it and it breaks, it's annoying and frustrating but can be easily replaced. If I've spent over a thousand pounds on something then I would be absolutely devastated.

That puts me off with the Glide. That and the way it will look to anyone else. I'm not thinking about vanity, but I want people to recognise me as being blind and no one will have any idea what this little robot shopping bag is doing there.

For biped, it says it's an all in one solution, but I presume being on your shoulders means that you could continue to use a cane with it? I don't know how that would work. But it also feels a little less precarious. This may be unfair but I have also heard it described as wearing a toilet seat but they may have improved the design since then.

I like the idea of the WeWalk in principal because I'm still going out with a cane and using it in the normal way and it's just giving me extra information. And being on top of a normal cane I don't have as big a concern about it getting broken.

There's a lot of promise in all of these and it will be interesting to see what, if any, of these devices actually work out as promised. But I'm not going to put down any money on something just based on promises and marketing.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

The idea of going out with nothing in my hands, nothing touching the ground - it feels weird, wrong, impossible even. Maybe the Glide will be it? I don't know - I'm ready to pay £800 to see, but the $40 a month is not to be forgotten.

By Assistive Inte… on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

It feels like about a thousands years when you are standing there, waiting for it, it is GPT-4, so a really nice detailed description that could be total rubbish!

By Lee on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

No way is current tech so accurate that a cane or something touching the ground wouldn't still be required. I simply wouldn't trust going out and possibly tripping up curbs or steps. Or, for that matter missing the top step and falling down them. Until if ever tech can say to within 1cm where your feet are then I personally believe something touching the ground is needed.

By mr grieves on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

Ah OK - there was a clue in your thread title. I was just thrown by it calling itself "all in one" which isn't really the case. In which case I'd feel much more comfortable than with Glide.

I think ultimately being responsible for yourself but using tech to give you information you couldn't really know on your own is the best way forward.

Much as I like the idea of Glide and think it's likely to be the best experience if it works, I think there are too many pitfalls going that way.

I still think WeWalk is the best form factor. Because if I'm going out, I'm grabbing my cane anyway. With Biped I then have to get dressed up in the toilet seat cover and then grab my cane. But we'll see.

By Travis Roth on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

What intrigues me about the Glide is that has tactile feedback not just audio. I know audio is the default for most things, but that does not work for all of us in all circumstances. As for a true copilot we're probably still a couple years away from enough processing power and AI to analyze video in real-time which is what is really needed. I still am questioning if Glide will be able to do this quickly enough too.
Competition is good though. We'll see what ends up working.

By Missy Hoppe on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

When I first saw this thread, it made me second-guess my decision to make a deposit on the Glide, but after reading this, I'm relieved to learn that, at least for my own situation, I didn't make a wrong choice. I may try to get smart glasses someday, but this type of wearable just doesn't appeal to me at all. Also, I know that everyone has different needs, preferences, etc., but I was very disappointed in the WeWalk cane. I actually got to test drive that through my work place, and honestly can't recall anything positive about it. Yes, it was in the familiar shape of a cane, but it was very heavy, and I remember the handle being uncomfortable to hold. Also, in my testing, it just vibrated constantly. I took it on a test walk to the dumpster at my apartment complex and actually got lost; this is a walkI routinely do with my titanium cane, or even with no mobility aid at all, so the fact that the WeWalk managed to get me completely disoriented. Anyway, I'm following all of these new tech developments with extreme interest, but at least so far, Glide is the only one that I'm feeling genuinely excited about.

By mr grieves on Saturday, June 22, 2024 - 04:06

I presume this was the first WeWalk? Not sure if the new one is going to be better.

I'm guessing that a lot of this tech is going to take a while to adjust to. I definitely have a concern over sensory overload with some of this. I guess that's where the Glide comes into its own - because it's not really giving you more information as taking your hand.

By Assistive Inte… on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

Announcement
Summer Tour: NOA is hosting demo days worldwide to showcase their device's latest innovations. The tour dates are:
• USA:
• Orlando: July 3rd - 8th
• Jacksonville: July 8th - 12th
• Europe:
• Lausanne, Switzerland: July 5th
• Birmingham, UK: July 7th - 8th
• Australia:
• Melbourne: July 16th - 18th
• Brisbane: July 19th - 22nd
New Features: NOA has upgraded its buttons for better usability, including:
• Favorite destinations and turn-by-turn navigation
• North tracking with an audible signal
• Obstacle detection with adjustable range
• Object detection (doors, exits, crosswalks) and full scene descriptions
Recent Events:
• SightCity (Frankfurt): High engagement and exciting updates for Germany soon.
• VivaTech (Paris): Inspirational event with a French TV appearance and industry connections.
Stay connected on social media for updates.

By SeasonKing on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

Few months back, I was just brainstorming this idea with a friend of mine. Throwing together a raspberry pie computer, some lidar sensers, some IR cameras, and providing haptic feedback through the motors embedded in the Sholder-straps, probably using python scripts. Lol!
Obviously, what these guys are doing seems far more advance.

By mr grieves on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

I got to at least put this on today. It's not quite a toilet seat cover - the wife thought it looked a bit like a military thing and said it made me look like Robocop. It sits round the neck and over the shoulders, and also has bone conduction headphones.

It has a load of little tactile buttons and things that I struggled to get a good feeling for. But you can choose between different modes like object detection, navigation, door detection and crosswalk detection. The object detection worked once it was unmuted and beeped whenever I faced an obstacle. You get higher pitched beeps if the object is above you and lower if beneath. There are modes for cane and dog to change how far down it beeps. The door detection didn't really work in the demo as the voice just stuttered - possibly interference with all the bluetooth devices around. Apparently the sidewalk detection will take continuous images to help you find it. But you still need to switch modes I believe so you can't have object detection then have it say "oh there's a sidewalk".

For navigation you can set three favourites and cycle them on device. You set the favourites up on device using drag and drop. I asked how well that worked with a screen reader. Apparently they've not tested that yet. Ummm... bit of a red flag.

No subscription charges - I think they are intending to run all the AI locally at some point.

I'm not sure I'd particularly want to wear one out - just a bit of a fiddly thing to put on amongst everything else. But was interesting to try.

Impossible to get a good idea of how these things work in an exhibition hall when you aren't moving around though.

By Brad on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

The thing made for the blind wasn't tested by the blind before launch. i'm really getting tired of things like that.

Really, drag and drop not working is just, no.

By mr grieves on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

I suppose if they have built the interface according to Apple guidelines then it might be accessible, but I'm not sure that drag and drop is the ideal interface for a screen reader anyway. It sounded like visual impaired customers were a priority over blind customers right now which didn't sit well with me at all.

Not that the product itself is without merit but it does sit in the middle of the options. WeWalk is much cheaper and seems simpler and has a better form factor. Biped can do more - for example changing the pitch based on whether the obstacle is above or below is pretty good, but it's just a bit of a bulky fiddly thing. And then there's Glide which just changes everything.

By Brad on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

If I had to choose one, I'd choose glide.

I'll be checking it out in a couple years.

By Brian on Monday, July 8, 2024 - 04:06

Disclaimer: Subject is a gaming term. Trolls need not apply. . . or reply.

Agree with Brad, I think Glyde would get the most use here. Although the new and improved We Walk cane does not necessarily seem bad, just. . . pricey. I mean, if I am going to shell out that kind of cash, I may as well go all out and aim for the biggest bang for my buck. 🙂