Intel has launched a text-to-speech E-Book reader that is designed to be used by the visually impaired, the Intel Reader. The Intel Reader features Intel’s Linux-based Moblin OS, and it converts books ...
Many of us take our ability to read signs, books, magazines, menus and instruction manuals for granted, but for an estimated 55 million people in the U.S. alone who have to contend with vision ...
The Intel Reader is a new mobile device designed to read printed text aloud for the blind or those who have a difficult time seeing or reading. Lance Whitney Contributing Writer Lance Whitney is a ...
The Intel Reader is an innovative device approximately the size of a paperback book that can help with reading text and documents. Simply point the Intel Reader at the text you wish to be read, and ...
Ben Foss grew up with dyslexia, a learning disability so severe that his mother had to read books to him throughout his school years, all the way through college. Now 36, he is spearheading the launch ...
Deep in the technology bunker of Fast Company we like us some e-readers–although some of us are just as partial to scuffed-up paperback books as well. Intel Corporation has just debuted their version, ...
The Reader, which will be available through select Intel VARs at launch, is geared to users with disabilities such as dyslexia or blindness, but Intel also sees potential use for ...
Intel on Tuesday introduced a new e-book reader, one designed for the visually impaired, which can read digital files of books aloud, as well as capture images from printed material via a 5-megapixel ...
On Tuesday, Intel will start selling a nifty new e-reader that can snap pictures of books and newspapers and then read them back to people who have a hard time reading the printed page. Called the ...
Ben Foss was a bright kid, but as a student, he struggled withreading even the simplest text. Afflicted with severe dyslexia, he relied onparents and tutors to read him his homework since the words on ...