translate

None - Doesn't use software

Picture of a traffic light shaped device with a hand pushing down on the middle yellow light.

A wall-mounted, touch-activated toy designed to introduce children with cognitive or physical disabilities to cause and effect concepts and to identify traffic lights and their meaning.

Oval-shaped device with two white knobs on one end, a red band around the center, and connected to a USB cable.

A lip, tongue, chin, finger or toe-operated USB mouse designed for individuals with spinal cord injury or upper extremity amputation or disability.

Large white square image of DVD cover with list of lesson topics along the top left and product name at the bottom left corner. An image of four different colored puzzle pieces with one piece slight removed is above the product name.

Language tutorial programs presented in American Sign Language (ASL) for use by people who are deaf or hard of hearing. The DVD series teaches ASL speakers how to read and write in English.

Yellow round ball of stretchy noodles on top of a round blue plastic base.

A neon stretchy noodle switch.

Angled view of rectangular black electronic device with a display showing control button choices and sound indicators.

A touch-free music system designed to allow people with physical or developmental disabilities to create music by using sensor technology to translate body movement into sounds.

Black, oval-shaped device with two red buttons on one end and a cable coming out of the other end with a USB connector.

A chin, lip, or tongue mouse controller designed for use by individuals with severe physical or neurological disabilities, upper extremity amputation, or spinal cord injury.

Photo of small, square gray device with a black post on the top right topped with a white round ball.

A pressure-sensitive joystick single switch designed for use by individuals with severe physical disabilities or spinal cord injury.

Rectangular white device with red surface and three toys on top next to three geometric shapes. Three black cables are on the lower right.

A sensory busy box designed to be a cause and effect training program, motor planning skill, and eye-hand coordination activity to provide audio, visual, and tactile stimulation for children with disabilities.

Long, blue half-moon shaped device with large yellow, blue, green, and red buttons.

A multi-functional adaptive computer interface designed for children who do not use a standard keyboard and standard mouse.

Picture of a hand holding a smartphone displaying the app, with a light green keyboard on the bottom and a text window on the top.

An on-screen keyboard designed to work on any sized device and for people with big fingers or grasping difficulties. It forgoes the QWERTY layout for a single-line of characters. It automatically autocorrects misspelled words and continues to "learn" the user's typing patterns.