Assistive Devices & Technology
Universal design is about people not being marginalized by poor design. Technology plays a role sometimes by making a place more universally accessible and sometimes providing a person with a special product unique to their needs.
Steve Jobs
Tuesday, October 18 2011 at 12:51PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
For all of us there is never just one starting point, one missed opportunity that is lost and never recovered. It is always a string of beginning moments, there is always a time to start anew, always a chance to step into a new vision. As with many of us, I am so moved by his passing. I am reminded again of how easily we take the living for granted and only when they are gone, when they have no chances to wonder us one more time, that we realize the depth of their contribution.
Steve Jobs began
Mid Century Modern Hits Retirement Age
Wednesday, June 29 2011 at 04:46PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Dragon
Thursday, June 16 2011 at 02:03PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Much assistive technology ends up benefitting us all; fax machines and closed captioning are two biggies. Yet another one is making it big: speech-to-text, also known as speech or voice recognition software. Originally designed as an alternative input device specific to the challenges of typing, it now is increasingly used as a business productivity tool. Just yesterday, an acquaintance was using it to capture meeting notes.
The winner software in this category is Dragon. You talk, it types. Us
Assistive Technology & UD, Part VI: Top-Ten List
Monday, October 25 2010 at 09:46PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
How to do a top-ten list for assistive technology? First, I wanted the list to reflect a universal design focus. Next, I wanted the technology to be new and presently available; I considered not just a technology’s use but also its wider social impact (I know, I am missing some really great products – another list). To prioritize the list would be challenging and to loose focus that it isn’t popularity, influence, availability or innovation, it’s about inclusivity. Finall
Assistive Technology & UD, Part V: Communication, Intellect & Development
Wednesday, October 20 2010 at 12:39AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Some disabilities are not readily noticed. It might be a weak heart that limits an otherwise strong person. It might be a learning disability that holds back a high IQ from being fully utilized. In communication, intellect and mental development, a disability more often and more easily escapes notice. It includes audio processing, word retrieval, social skills (adaptive behaviors) and developmental traits such as autism. The diagnosed and recorded numbers probably represent only a small portion
Assistive Technology & UD, Part IV: Vision Loss
Wednesday, October 13 2010 at 10:33AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
“Darn. Where did I leave my eyeglasses now?” This is a familiar cry for many people who use eyeglasses to help with certain tasks such as driving or reading. Eyeglasses are such a simple piece of assistive technology. So simple, we take them for granted. So simple, we even make personal fashion statements with them. So simple, and for some, so necessary. Without my eyeglasses, I wouldn’t even try to pour a cup of tea!
According to the American Vision Council, over two-hundred
Assistive Technology & UD, Part III: Hearing Loss
Tuesday, September 28 2010 at 01:58AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
My grandfather, a Russian immigrant, had diminishing hearing as he aged. As a lover of gadgets and an early adopter of technology, he soon fitted himself with a modern (1960’s) electronic hearing aid. He had a microphone concealed as a tie pin, a gizmo in his pocket, and a loudspeaker in his ear. He also loved to haggle. It wasn’t long before his hearing aid became a strategic bargaining device.
Favored for his haggling and personal amusement was Tiffany on Fifth Avenue. This was a
Assistive Technology & UD, Part II: Physical
Monday, September 20 2010 at 05:36PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
When an able-bodied person thinks about disability, it’s physical disability that comes to mind for most. A whole range of physical limitations blurs into a blue and white symbol of a person in a wheelchair, special parking spaces near entrances, and the odd cavernous feeling bathrooms. This oversimplification misses the extent to which we all cope with degrees of physical limitations at different times. It misses how much universal design and assistive technology can help us at those time
Assistive Technology & UD, Part I: What Is It
Monday, September 13 2010 at 09:03AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
It’s expensive to have a disability. Why? Is it cheaper to design and build for the masses than it is to design for inclusivity? Or, are our designers and builders just ignorant and don’t know any better? Or, is it because we still think that people with disabilities are rare? It’s expensive to have a disability because we still don’t apply universal design in our products and environments. A person with a disability still lives in a world built only for able-bodied adult
Technology
Wednesday, September 23 2009 at 01:39PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
What are some of the technologies that support universal design (and aging-in-place)?
PERS (personal emergency response system): These are those medical devices that you wear at home that link to a central station where help can be dispatched quickly; these little devices give you and loved ones great peace of mind … if you wear them and are conscious and able enough to push the button.
GPS (global positioning system): My teenager is zipping off on a new dirt bike; he doesn’t have
Gadgetmania!
Saturday, August 15 2009 at 12:48PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Ages ago, the only gadget was a pair of specs. When not used, they hung neatly from one’s neck. If I hung today’s gadgets from my neck, I’d soon be crippled.
Gadgets start with the cell phone. Next would be the TV clicker. But given today’s level of remote controls, I’d soon need something like Batman’s utility belt: remote temperature controls, automatic door openers, shade controls, garage openers, flashlights, cordless phones, MP3 players, GPS, medical ale
Universal Mistake
Wednesday, July 29 2009 at 01:55AM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
Universal design is often confused with handicap access. This mistake isn’t limited to the average person just learning about universal design, it is one also made by the pros. I recently saw two designs that were supposed to be universal and missed the target.
The first was an expensive wayfinding device designed to assist a person find their way in at a downtown tourist attraction. It was a solid object placed on a sidewalk. It had many features that would meet universal design objectiv
'Time' To Do It Right
Monday, April 13 2009 at 07:42PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
I was struck by an article by Dr. Dr Sunil Bhatia in that way when a subject just doesn’t leave you alone – it kept popping up in my thoughts. Dr. Bhatia created and runs the Design For All Institute of India and publishes a monthly newsletter. He recently wrote about the invention of the measurement of time and its impact on human life; click here for the pdf article.
Long ago there were no means to measure time beyond the sun, moon and seasons. One can imagine that to be present i
Obama and Sultey
Friday, December 19 2008 at 06:56PM By Konrad Kaletsch | 0 Comments
In our nation, there is much relief and hope with the coming Obama administration. I like seeing him speak, I look forward to his words, and I am excited about his choices. He seems personable and genuinely caring.
On December 10 he announced members chosen to be on his green team. I watched the press conference and saw something unusual as a result of a rare camera angle. When it was Nancy Sutley’s turn at the podium the camera shot switched from the rear of the room to the side of the s
Topics
- All Blogs
- Assistive Devices & Technology
- Baby Boomers
- Bathroom
- Educational
- Home Improvement / Construction
- Kitchen
- Maintenance
- Medical
- Most Informative
- Most Popular
- Most Provocative
- Most Surprising
- Multi-Media (video, radio, podcast)
- Nature
- Politics & Governance
- Spirituality
- Top 10 Lists & General Lists
- Travel
- Universal Design
View by Month
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- October 2011
- August 2011
- June 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- June 2010
- January 2010
- November 2009
- October 2009
- September 2009
- August 2009
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- March 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
- June 2008
- May 2008
- April 2008

A little humor stumbled upon.