Calling Braillists in Worcestershire, West Midlands and Beyond

New College Worcester, Royal National College for the Blind in Hereford and Queen Alexandra College in Birmingham are just some examples of organisations doing great work to teach and produce braille to high standards. However, we are sure there are many others in the same region with an equally strong interest in the value of braille. Through the Braillists, An opportunity exists to share expertise, develop skills and grow relationships between braille enthusiasts.

If you would like to connect with Braillists in Worcestershire, the West Midlands and surrounding areas, please contact Dave Williams. Email [email protected] or call 03335552084 (calls charged at your local rate and normally included in bundled minutes).

Calvin Cheung

We’ve had a great proposal from a university project on the Braillists forum. Calvin is looking to test his tactile graphing and images concept in a Braillists group over the next couple of months. Calvin is looking to test the idea at the next group that meets in Bristol. Watch this space for the next meeting date.

A Shift of Focus for the Braillists

We’ve had a great year for the Braillists in 2016, seen membership tip over 250, and lots of expressions of interests from a variety of new projects. Therefore Braillists groups will now have a much greater project focus rather than restricted to geographic location. For example, groups will come together to test the Canute for Bristol Braille Technology, support the development of other braille-related technologies that come along, develop innovative approaches for teaching braille, advocate for braille generally, etc. Groups will still be able to meet together if the members live near to one another, but they will also include members who participate remotely, using Skype for example.

BBC Micro:Bit

The BBC have been developing a new miniature computer to teach children how to code. Its a little like a Raspberry Pi (not a pie, mind), but with its own small screen, cheaper and simpler to program.

The Braillists will be assisting the BBC to develop blind and VI accessible add-ons to the Micro:Bit and to run trials to test accessibility for blind users. Watch this space…

Braille Calliper

Ed Rogers visited Squirrel Devices in Boston, MA, who have designed amazing Braille callipers. They are using an innovative non-digital technology for rendering refreshable Braille numbers on the head of the callipers.

They sell in America for around $20, and they’re planning on bringing them to the UK and Ireland as well. They have sent the Braillists eight sample units, six of which we’ve already distributed to teachers of Braille to trial in educational settings.

They are keen to work with the Braillists; be that helping distribution or a series of brain storms to come up with alternative uses for their very exciting technology.

Administrivia

The Braillists is undergoing a transformation to become more sustainable. We have established a voluntary steering committee and are heading toward registering Braillists as a Charitable Foundation this summer. Adopting a recognized legal structure will help the central Braillists organization to independently accept donations and apply for funding.

To support the work of the committee, establish a Braillists group in your area, change your newsletter subscription, give us a shout: email [email protected]; follow @Braillists on Twitter; join us on our discussion forum.

An Appearance on the NCBI Technology Podcast

Ed Rogers and I were interviewed by the delightful Stuart Lawler for the NCBI Technology Podcast when we were in Ireland for the Dublin Braillists meeting in January. Stuart is a fantastic advocate for Braille and assistive technologies and the podcasts are beautifully produced and well worth a listen. To hear us talk about the Braillists group and Canute Braille ebook reader check out the February podcast.