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Daily Living

Devices and services to provide support for everyday life.
Black glasses with dark tinted lenses and a cord protruding from the end of the stem that leads to a small rectangular device with menu options on the side.

Smart glasses that clear images directly onto the retina so users can see both the image and the background. The glasses are suitable for those with low vision and can be used for sports, live concerts, GPS navigation, and clear vision with free-focus. 

A person walking down a street with a white that has a long handle with menu options.

A cane developed for the visually impaired that can pair with a mobile application transforming it into a smart cane. 

A computer with a desktop mono-pole type standing camera that has a book below its lens. On the computer screen, the words are written with one of them highlighted in yellow and written with red letters.

A portable reading camera that can be combined with a scanning and reading software to give to blind and low vision users instant portable access to printed material with an array of human-sounding voices. 

A screenshot of a computer screen with contacts listed in the left column. The first name is highlighted and on the right is the contact's information, with a yellow post-it attached saying hello. There are tools at the top of the list for adding, editing, and scheduling.

Software for task management: managing Contacts, action logging, virtual post-its. It is a Web software particularly suited to small organizations and for users who prefer to not use paper memos.

An illustration of Live Transcribe as featured on a phone, with text that reads "With Live Transcribe you can see words appear on your phone as they're spoken." The caption above the illustration reads "See real-time transcriptions anywhere."

An accessibility app designed for people who are deaf and hearing impaired. The app features automatic speech recognition technology and performs real-time transcription of speech and sound to text on a phone screen, so users can more easily participate in conversations.

An icon of a blue and white striped hot air balloon with the company name to the right.

A magnification and screen reading software.

Three digital watches, each with a black face and a colored, plastic wristband that buckles: a black, purple and blue one.

An anti-distraction, timer tool with gentle vibration cues for students to get back to work. This empowers students who often get distracted and need constant discreet redirection to help make good attendance habits.

A small rectangular device, about the size of a smartphone with a circular layout of 4 buttons and with another button in the middle of these 4 and one below them. Next to this device are a specialized pair of glasses with a black frame that has 2 small recessed cameras spaced apart on the front and 2 small round cylinders where the ears would be. The glasses are resting on a single clear front lens that has a notch for the nose bridge.

A device to assist blind people to perceive the world, by transferring visual information into auditory, based on advanced artificial intelligence and computer vision technology.

A mobile phone's screen featuring a filter search bar with Fitbit, Google Calendar, and Dropbox apps listed below, and the text "Get all your apps talking to each other" above.

An app that works with over 600 apps, including Twitter, Telegram, Google Drive, Twitch, Weather Underground, Instagram, Gmail, and devices like Google Home, Amazon Alexa, Nest, Philips Hue, and Android phones iPhones.

A partial screen of an iPhone. It has a black background with white text: Around Me, See Object in Image, Read Text in Image, Upgrade to Eye-D Pro, and Contact Us.

An app that assists the visually impaired in independent living by helping them evaluate the world around them with help from their smartphone.