Discussion about the top multi line & tactile graphics displays out there

By TheBlindGuy07, 5 October, 2025

Forum
Assistive Technology

So I really want to hear people experience about those. A lot of amazing inovation is happening in the space of refreshable multi line braille & tactile graphics displays.
We have the Monarch sitting in a premium place of its own.
https://www.aph.org/product/monarch/
But much more affordable (relatively), we have dotpad x, of which I have heard great description on Double Tap.
https://www.dotincorp.com/en/product/dotpadx
But, recently, I have discovered this new kid in the place, nobody else seem to mention it. Canute console Premium.
https://bristolbraille.org/about-canute-console-the-next-generation-in-braille/
For the latter, it doesn't pretend to be in the same tactile graphic display as the two others, rather that it can mimick it in a very useful way, if what I understand is correct. Plus, its pricing is very competitive, and it's open source!
I saw and Canadian Assistive Technology sells the Canute 360 at around $4500. Expensive, but why would I ever purchase a 40 cells braille display instead of a 9x40 cells one for more or less the same price?

I really can't understand why Monarch is so expensive while DotPad X, another real tactile graphic display, is at least 2 times less expensive, and has a real 20 cells row below the actual display (for those who know, this was the innitial description of the graphity plus before Humanware partners with APH instead).
For those who have any of these, I would love to know what is your experience with it from a screen reader support point of view. Does VoiceOver actually shows more than one line as its doc pretends it can?
I saw that video of the canute 360 on youtube and the insane sound it makes, but I think that was a prototype device. And Monarch is just slightly quiter than that. I know somebody who works for Humanware and has Monarch for home because of that, and will try this as soon as I can.
I hope this thread can become something important for that emerging space, or at least start a conversation.
PS: if this actually works, how useful can Freeform on mac become with any of these devices?
PS2: something some people may mix: a tactile graphic/multi line braille display, is not aimed, nor can, replicate pixel by pixel an actual monitor. You really have to understand this subtle point. I was making this confusion before so...

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Comments

By Maldalain on Sunday, October 5, 2025 - 04:30

THis is one intriguing device I wish to get one day. I listened to a podcast recently where the device seems to achieve a lot for what it is sold for.

By TheBlindGuy07 on Sunday, October 5, 2025 - 14:07

I respect Dotincorp a lot for what they do, but they could care more about their website about specialist products for blind / low vision. It's infinitely worse on mobile.

By TheBlindGuy07 on Thursday, October 9, 2025 - 03:39

I have a class where we're doing flowcharts and other network diagram, the regular folks with visio, me with UML (plantuml to be exact). In a couple of semesters I'll be doing user interface design web/mobile. So far the other blind student has done all these without any special accessory, the teacher does phisical mockups.
I wonder, if my grant permits, which should I buy, between a PIAF machine from Humanware (the UK equivalent might be fuse touch something) with enough swell papers, a tactile graphic embosser, or dotpad x / canute console premium? or, I really don't want, or Monarch?
I know that in a way or another in my career I'll need some effective way to have real visual/spacial perception.
Those who are in these things, are you able to compare?
I would also be doing relatively advanced math, calculus 3+, where something like dotpad x or monarch seem to suit more.
Note that I already have a braille doodle and this device should be on everyone's hand here especially given its price and what it allows in spite of being less expensive than an apple watch SE.
For pure maths, I would have thought about tactipad, but I'd rather need to either print computerized graphs or realtime refreshes.

By João Santos on Thursday, October 9, 2025 - 05:34

Desmos have an accessible graphing calculator that conveys the generated graphs as sound. It doesn't work well for me since I have quite a hard time distinguishing between parabolic and hyperbolic shapes, or triangle from sine waves, to name a few examples, but your mileage may vary so maybe give it a try if you haven't already. You can use an expression like y=sin(x)*x to produce a wavy graph whose waves increase in size as you get father away from the origin in order to gage how it sounds like.

By Scott Davert on Thursday, October 9, 2025 - 13:28

Member of the AppleVis Editorial Team

The Monarch has all of these capabilities around the calculator as far as I know. You can graph equations, useany math expression I can think of, but the real math is in the cost. At roughly 18K, it's not a small factor. However, it is the only device on the market I'm aware of that can produce both tactile graphics or text on demand. It's still a work in progress for sure, but there is a lot happening. If you are looking more toward graphics with more of a focus on the graphics, the DotPad X may be more your thing. I've not used this device, but early reports are that there are still issues with connecting to the platform they're using. They come from a credible user. The DotPad X has 20 cells of braille for text, but the primary use for it is graphics. There is also the Orbit Slate, which only focuses on text. There are still more devices coming down the pipeline like the Codex from NewHaptics. If I had a grant and had some time to make the decision, I'd be utilizing any time before the expiration of the grant to wait. I feel like this part of braille is at a critical juncture in terms of development, and the picture will look, and feel if you have a tactile graphics capable device, much different by March or April. In terms of screen reader support, that is still emerging. JAWS seems to be at the forefront of features, though NVDA does have support for the multi-line environment. iOS? It has a way to go. I'm not sure if I'm permitted to post that info since it's the beta of iOS where some support exists. I have no idea how things are going on Android, maybe someone else with more experience can comment on that. Also, speaking of Android, this is what the Monarch runs. I know of a couple of people who have installed the Google Play Store on their Monarch, but seem to get only 1-line support in many apps. Which makes sense, screen readers have to do quite a bit to render this content effectively as I understand it. I hope this info helps somehow!

By Brian on Thursday, October 9, 2025 - 13:57

I look forward to the day that this is common place. Sadly, I will be a wee old man by this point in time, I'm afraid.