By BrailleTouch, 27 December, 2012
Forum
iOS and iPadOS
Greetings and Happy Holidays!
My name is Caleb, and I'm one of the developers of a new iPhone app called BrailleTouch. BrailleTouch allows you to type using braille on your touchscreen, and is based on the standard six key braille keyboard. We are excited to announce that BrailleTouch will be on the App Store by the end of January! We hope that you will like BrailleTouch and find it useful. I'm happy to answer any questions you may have, and I've included some more information about the app below.
With BrailleTouch, you can send text messages, emails, and tweets from the touchscreen braille keyboard. You can also copy text you type in braille to the clipboard and paste it into other apps on your iPhone. There is a free version of BrailleTouch, so you can try it before you buy it. The free version lets you type in braille and hear the text you entered. Many braille instructors have told us that they would like to use BrailleTouch as a teaching tool, which the free version will support. Additional features are available as an In App Purchase. The upgrade allows you to send text messages, emails, and tweets from the touchscreen braille keyboard, and also allows you to copy text from the touchscreen braille keyboard and paste it into other apps on your iPhone.
BrailleTouch is based on research conducted at Georgia Tech in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, where I am a graduate student. My colleagues and I tested the software with eleven volunteers who are blind. We found that people who knew the standard Perkins braille keyboard were able to master BrailleTouch within an hour of practice and type at an average of 23 words per minute using Grade 1 braille. We received such positive feedback that we were inspired to take this research out of the laboratory and release BrailleTouch to the public. We hope this software will provide a helpful alternative to the VoiceOver split tap keyboard, and that it will help improve the mobile computing experience for people in the blind community who use an iPhone.
BrailleTouch is fully compatible with VoiceOver. It works on the iPhone 3GS through the iPhone 5, iPod touch models since the 3rd generation, and requires iOS 5.0 or a later operating system. BrailleTouch is only for the iPhone and iPod touch, and is not supported on the iPad. The first release is based on North American English Grade 1 Uncontracted Braille. You can choose to hear speech feedback for each character you type, each word you type, or both.
More information about BrailleTouch is available on our website:
http://brailletouchapp.com/
The website includes a User Guide and Frequently Asked Questions. You can also sign up for our email list, and we will notify you when we have an exact release date in January for the app.
We are also on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/brailletouch
With the free version of BrailleTouch, you can try out the touchscreen braille keyboard and hear the text that you typed read back to you. The Upgrade allows you to send text messages, emails, and tweets, and also allows you to copy text from the braille keyboard to paste into other apps. The upgrade costs US$19.99.
I am happy to answer any questions you may have. We are very excited about the upcoming release of BrailleTouch on the App Store. I hope that you will like BrailleTouch and find it useful.
Best wishes and happy holidays,
Caleb
The BrailleTouch Team
http://brailletouchapp.com/
[I have edited this post, based on a change to simplify the upgrade process to get the full set of features.]
Comments
Exciting, but...
Sounds Great
One more thing
Grade 2 braille
No grade 2??
Still very fast - even before Grade 2
Pending launch and grade 2 implimentation
Re: Pending launch and grade 2 implementation
ipad be more beneficial?
no free version yet?
Thanks for letting us know
Comparason with other technologies
My Two Cents
turkish character
RE: Comparison with other technologies
Language Support
Hi, I must start off by
Hi, I must start off by saying like everyone else on this thread I think it is a massive shortcoming of this app that grade 2 isn't included in the app right from the start, OK maybe your testers said release the app now and finish grade 2 later. But to me at least the only advantage of using an app like this would be the ability to use grade 2, as an app like fleksy is fast, but at least for the moment if the app can only do grade 1 and is as fast as fleksy, what's the advantage of using it? regarding braille, does the app support UK braille? As I have no idea what the differences are between US and UK braille. I will be interested in trying the app, but given that the app has been in development for so long, why not take the time, wait a few months finish grade 2 then release?
its not like there has been huge pressure from the public for a release, you could have taken as long as you wanted to get grade 2 sorted and then announced a release date.
Oh well, I will give the free app a try but won't pay for any upgrades til grade 2 is supported and when UK braille is supported.
Add-on Pricing
US vs. UK braille
Exciting.
I agree with you there.
iPads?!
Why BrailleTouch is not availble for iPads
A question about supported Braille languages
Unified English Braille (UEB)
Braille Encodings and the BrailleTouch app
Thoughts on the Braille Touch
Re: Thoughts on the Braille Touch
face book integration?
Re: face book integration?
Re: Add-on Pricing
business structure, in fact everything, seems wrong to me
Braille Translation Tables
Exciting and Innovative
Caleb, Firstly I just want to
A Good Point
Great Work
Take grade 2 seriously
BrailleTouch - upgrading to full version
When we think about Cost
Congrats
Re: Congrats
This app sounds great! a few questions though
Re: This app sounds great! a few questions though
I've a strange question
Re: An interesting question
Ahh, now I see