New Technology Could Make Communicating With Deaf-Blind People as Easy as Texting

It’s easy for conversations about advancing technologies to become oversaturated with discussions of new smartwatches or weighing the pros and cons of the latest cellphones.

The true heroes of technology, however, have always been the innovative creators who make strides in the medical field, revolutionize communication or help create a better understanding of the world around us.

That’s what makes the Mobile Lorm Glove from the Design Research Lab something truly worth getting excited about.

The lab, located at the Berlin University of the Arts, is continuing to develop the Mobile Lorm Glove, a comfortable glove that may forever revolutionize communication for the deaf-blind community.

The basic purpose of the glove is to translate text into a tactile alphabet known as Lorm that deaf-blind people frequently use to communicate with people around them.

In that sense, it is a new-age translator. An impressive feat, but not necessarily adding up to the “revolutionary” claims.

It’s the glove’s implications, however, that are truly groundbreaking.

The glove isn’t just a way for a deaf-blind person to talk to their friends without them having to learn Lorm. It’s a way to expand their freedom, social circles and even their economic opportunities.

The glove mocks the very barriers that used to be frighteningly hard to surpass without such technology — the barriers that once capped a deaf-blind person’s access to the rest of the world.

Pressure sensors on the glove create a sensation of touch on a person’s hand so they can feel the same sensations they would get if someone who understood Lorm was trying to communicate with them.

Since the glove can decode text messages and emails as well, it also makes it possible for deaf-blind people to have interactions with people who aren’t standing right next to them. This means they can receive text messages from a friend, respond to business emails and even dive head first into the digital comedy that rules Twitter.

The glove even comes with features that are similar to auto-correct.

The BBC explains that in Lorm, the letter ‘S’ would be represented by drawing a circle in one’s hand. If the user accidentally draws a square or triangle instead, the glove still recognizes an ‘S’ as the closest letter.

The glove will also allow its wearer to control how quickly the messages are translated in Lorm. So a younger person who may not be efficient in Lorm just yet could choose a slower pace while an adult who has communicated via Lorm for their entire life can use a faster pace.

These features alone make the glove a truly admirable technological feat, but researchers went a step further.

The glove could actually become a key tool for deaf-blind children in school.

“It supports mobile communication over distance… and it enables parallel one-to-many communication, which is especially helpful in school and other learning contexts,” a report by the Design Research Lab explains.

This means a teacher could send messages to an entire class of deaf-blind students rather than be forced to only use one-on-one communication.

Researchers say the glove is still considered a prototype, but based on its early stages, the glove could be one of the greatest technological achievements and finally create a convenient method of communication that will allow deaf-blind people to socialize more, take on certain careers and not feel quite as closed off from the world around them.

The Equil Smartmarker Just Made It Easier for You to Transfer Your Notes From Your Whiteboard to Your Device

Equil’s Smartmarker lets you record your whiteboard to the cloud and even convert them to text. Writing with the Smartmarker feels like working with any other erasable marker because that’s exactly what you’re doing. Instead of including a proprietary ink cartridge you have to swap out every few weeks, the Equil lets you drop in any marker you’d pick up in a 12-pack for a few bucks at Staples. Kyle Russell takes a look at the new Equil Smartmarker.

Source: TechCrunch

Yahoo Unveils New Password-Free Login, But Does It Really Keep Your Email More Secure?

For years now, warnings about weak passwords have fallen on deaf ears.

Despite a plethora of stories online that boast the power of new age hackers and highlight the dangers of having strangers digging through your email, it is rare that people actually take additional steps to keep their online accounts and digital information secure.

Well, Yahoo is hoping to create a new password-free login system that would aim to make their users’ information more secure.

Rather than having one password, typically something personal or easy to remember that can be guessed by the right malicious tech-savvy foe, Yahoo’s new approach is to give users many one-time only passwords.

Here’s how it works.

First, you toss out the old wrinkled piece of paper hiding under your keyboard that has a list of your passwords written down on it.

Next, you attempt to log in on your Yahoo account and keep your cellphone close by.

Yahoo would then send a one-time only password to your phone that you would use to log in.

Once the password is used, it can’t be used again.

It seems a like an efficient way to keep hackers and nosy visitors out of your email.

As perfect as the plan may sound, some tech lovers are concerned that the new method isn’t quite as secure as Yahoo users might hope it would be

The first issue starts with human nature and our ability to lose a cellphone in virtually any situation.

Even people who use their cellphones for everything including banking, GPS, as a smart remote, a voice recorder, a notepad and more have at least one frightening tale about when they left their cell phone unattended.

It’s the modern-age thriller story that has everyone desperately hoping for a happy ending.

You set your cellphone down in the grocery store, the gym, the book store, the coffee shop or wherever else you may find yourself in the midst of a busy day only to realize hours later that you never picked it back up.

That mistake, if you’re using Yahoo’s password-free login, could put your email in a compromising position.

Even when some phones are locked, a pop-up message will unveil the contents of new text messages.

That means if you send the one-time password to your phone without realizing someone else has it, they could essentially log in to your email.

It’s a concern that has been brought up by several tech blogs and message boards but also a warning that should come with a grain of salt.

Most people will likely go searching for their phone before they attempt to log in since they know their phone will be needed for the process.

Also, even if a person gets the one-time password, they might not know your actual username to log in.

Lastly, they would have to care enough about what you’re doing to go fishing around in an attempt to log in with the password they have received.

Unless you’re a multi-millionaire or a scientist on the brink of a groundbreaking medical breakthrough, the average person just won’t be too concerned about what’s hiding in your inbox.

If you’re anything like the vast majority of email users, your inbox is crowded with junk mail anyway.

So while that particular scenario doesn’t seem to pose a significant risk, there are still questions about the practicality of the password-free method since Yahoo already had a two-step process that appears to be more secure than the new method.

With a few quick alterations to your security settings, a Yahoo user can require that an additional password be sent to their phone only after they have first entered the correct password on the screen.

Both the password and the one-time code will have to be correct for anyone to gain access to the account.

The goal, however, is to eventually eliminate the need for passwords all together.

The desire to bid passwords farewell for good has also inspired the launch of many tech products that would allow consumers to log in to different accounts using their fingerprints or by having a device scan their eye.

While these products have shown great potential, they are also still riddled with bugs for now that make their designs impressive but their functionality underwhelming.

5 ‘Must Go’ Tech Conference Happening This Year

8026689925_0ded53f1cb_c

The Strange Loop

The Strange Loop conference will meet in St. Louis on Sept. 24-26. The goal is to make connections with the creators and users of the coding languages, libraries, tools and techniques at the forefront of the Web industry. The prices for the conference start at $150 to $600 depending on the type of service you want.

The Future of ‘Green’ Technology Could Be Riding on a Solar-Powered Plane’s Round-the-World Flight

On March 8, a solar-powered plane called the Solar Impulse 2 began its attempt at a historic trip around the world. On board the futuristic aircraft are Swiss pilots Andre Borschberg and Bertrand Piccard — and, possibly, the future of “green” technology.

The innovative plane began its journey in Abu Dhabi and has scheduled stops in India, Myanmar and China before taking the big flight of faith across the Pacific Ocean to North America.

If the trip around the globe is successful, Solar Impulse 2 will make history as the first solar-powered aircraft to circumnavigate the globe, Live Science reports.

If all goes according to plan, the global trip will be on its final leg in July or August.

Both pilots acknowledge that there will be a lot of challenges along the way.

Whether its battles with the weather or just administrative issues, there are a lot of factors that will come into play when deciding the success of the trip.

Before the trip round-the-world is even completed, however, the aircraft is already worthy of praise.

The solar-powered plane has the ability to harness energy throughout the day to keep the light aircraft operative at night.

Both scientifically and aesthetically, the plane is an intriguing work with serious potential to revolutionize the way consumers and corporations view sustainable energy and “green” technology.

About now is when many people begin to wonder, “How am I still watching gas prices like they’re lottery numbers when a plane can fly around the world without using a drop of fuel?”

Well, the trip across Earth could potentially drive more changes.

Let’s be clear. A successful trip will not get corrupt politicians out of bed with oil tycoons nor will it hack away at corporate greed that is keeping many companies invested in keeping the oil industry alive despite what it means for the environment.

What a successful flight could mean, however, is that consumers will be exposed to the reality that bidding farewell to harmful fossil fuels doesn’t mean they will have to shift their lifestyles to something mirroring that of the Flintstones.

Solar Impulse 2 could convince people on multiple continents that green energy is an attractive, affordable and realistic part of the future, especially when it comes to transportation.

Electric cars have not been the grand success consumers hoped for after charging stations seemed relatively inconvenient and the cost of the cars seemed a little pricey, but Solar Impulse 2 could deliver a positive perception of green energy that works with the Earth rather than destroys it.

It will prove to people that anyone suggesting the technology isn’t available for safer, more energy-efficient and environmentally friendly modes of transportation is simply a liar.

When it comes down to it, the transition to solar-powered transportation or electric vehicles that don’t rely on dangerous, costly fuel won’t happen without enough consumer backing.

Solar Impulse 2 could possibly, hopefully, encourage more consumers to realize they could very well be a few years away from efficient solar-powered modes of transportation. They just have to be adamant about making such demands.

Writing the App Is Fun; LaunchKit Can Get You Through the Tedious Part

mobile app developers

Perhaps some of the most popular tech startup ideas come in the form of apps. From tech-savvy veterans to rookie mobile users, nearly everybody knows somebody who has hopes of creating and launching their own successful mobile app.

On the surface, mobile app creation seems like a fun task.

Find a problem that you care about and solve it with an app, right? It can’t be too complicated.

But it is.

Complicated, tedious and downright stressful — that’s how some of today’s most successful app developers might describe the process of getting their beloved app to market and onto the devices of mobile users all across the globe.

Successful app developers will let anyone with their own mobile app dreams know that the writing is the fun part.

Getting the app to market, on the other hand, can be a grueling task.

But in the world where there is literally an app for everything, there is also an app to help launch other apps.

Well, it’s not technically an app, but it does have a collection of tools that budding mobile app developers might find useful.

The website and genius brand is called LaunchKit.

The trio behind LaunchKit knows quite a bit about the troubles of getting an app to market.

Brenden Mulligan, Taylor Hughes and Riz Sattar are also the creators of Cluster app, which gives users a more private and personal way to share content with friends and family.

Think social media without the narcissism often associated with wanting strangers perusing through your vacation photos.

Mulligan explained that while creating the app was fun, there were tedious tasks throughout the process that were begging for more efficient, innovative ways to be completed.

One of those tasks was getting screenshots of the app and ensuring they were all in the high resolutions that Apple requires if one hopes to get past the pearly gates of the official App Store.

While the Cluster team didn’t have a more efficient way to tackle this problem when they were in the midst of the launch process, they are leading other new app developers to a better solution.

LaunchKit will grow to include more and more handy tools and services for people hoping to launch their own apps, and one of the latest additions is a screenshot builder.

“Create gorgeous images for your App Store page in minutes,” the LaunchKit website promises of the free service.

The free LaunchKit service comes after the team had already released an App Store template for Sketch earlier this year, but LaunchKit gives users access to such a tool without actually needing to pay $99 for the Sketch app.

“LaunchKit is the tool we wish existed when we were building Cluster, and stuff that’s helping us manage our Cluster apps,” Mulligan told TechCrunch.

There are only a handful of tools in the LaunchKit for now, but the company has plans of expanding the resources with time.

Other featured tools include a “Review Monitor,” to help creators keep up with the reviews their app receives, and a handy library that contains a collection of “writing and open source contributions” that could help out any budding tech entrepreneur.

While these services are free, LaunchKit will eventually start offering services that may have premium features attached to a free base version of the tool that users would have to pay for.