EasySMS uses text-to-speech technology to read out text messages and translates visual symbols into text replies.
EasySMS app is offering a more visual and aural way for those who can’t read or write to understand and reply to text messages. Developed by students at the
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne in
Switzerland, the
Windows 7 Phone app takes received text messages and breaks down each word into an interactive button. Users can hear the whole text message read out in a synthesized voice, or click on individual words to hear them read out and then drag those words into their own reply. The app also contains a dictionary of visual symbols which can be incorporated into the text message reply. The user’s
contacts list is also made more visual by adding avatars, which can be customized to contain memorable features. According to the team behind EasySMS, the dropping price of mass produced smartphones and greater mobile coverage means they are already being used in poorer rural areas of the world, where many of the more than 800 million people who are
illiterate reside. The app enables those who can’t read or write to take full advantage of the technology, as well as easily keep in touch with relatives and friends.
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