OnceFuturePoly
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Aug 19, 2011
- Posts
- 216
My 85 year old parent is having great trouble reading newspapers and magazines, etc. He's been to the vision doctors, and there isn't anything specific they can do. It is not a case of Macular Degeneration.
He saw (and liked) a reading machine -- a tabletop camera/monitor. Here is a picture of one particular brand:
http://www.maxiaids.com/ProdImages/357364.jpg
This is not a OCR to voice text reader like a totally blind person would want. It also has a very simple interface, like an on-off switch and a knob for magnification factor. Another button selects different modes, like color, white on black, black on white, photo, text/line.
They're expensive, as in thousands of US Dollars.
Knowing Lit readers are from all walked of life, I thought I'd throw out a couple of questions and see if anyone can point me to some education.
1. Does Medicare or other government programs contribute to buying these things? I see ads saying that vendors can get medicare to pay for a battery powered cart for the eligible.
Anyone hear of such a program for reading machines?
2. A web camera and computer can do something similar. This biggest problem would be software that presents a simple interface, then a camera with good short range depth of field and auto focus. A TV interface (composite) is a possibility if the resolution of the TV is big enough to provide clear magnification. And some sort of camera mount and light are needed. But in theory, a person good with their hands and computer literate could cobble up something.
Can anyone speak about software and cameras?
Are there cameras (+ lens) that can do auto-focus & zoom 40x? I'm thinking direct connect to a monitor.
What would be great is to find a forum where tinkers are talking to each other about what they've built for vision limited people.
Thanks!
He saw (and liked) a reading machine -- a tabletop camera/monitor. Here is a picture of one particular brand:
http://www.maxiaids.com/ProdImages/357364.jpg
This is not a OCR to voice text reader like a totally blind person would want. It also has a very simple interface, like an on-off switch and a knob for magnification factor. Another button selects different modes, like color, white on black, black on white, photo, text/line.
They're expensive, as in thousands of US Dollars.
Knowing Lit readers are from all walked of life, I thought I'd throw out a couple of questions and see if anyone can point me to some education.
1. Does Medicare or other government programs contribute to buying these things? I see ads saying that vendors can get medicare to pay for a battery powered cart for the eligible.
Anyone hear of such a program for reading machines?
2. A web camera and computer can do something similar. This biggest problem would be software that presents a simple interface, then a camera with good short range depth of field and auto focus. A TV interface (composite) is a possibility if the resolution of the TV is big enough to provide clear magnification. And some sort of camera mount and light are needed. But in theory, a person good with their hands and computer literate could cobble up something.
Can anyone speak about software and cameras?
Are there cameras (+ lens) that can do auto-focus & zoom 40x? I'm thinking direct connect to a monitor.
What would be great is to find a forum where tinkers are talking to each other about what they've built for vision limited people.
Thanks!
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