
Who cares about training, this looks like fun. This could let blind people join the rest of the world in virtual reality multiuser games. The whole time I was reading ready player one, I kept wondering how we would make that game accessible if we ever got one like that for real. Now I think we know. If we make it fun kids will want to use their canes.
Now that I?ve showed everybody just how much I want to play with it, I can come up with all kinds of training ideas. Kids who are thinking about college and want to move to an urban area from a very rural area would benefit from a little bit of coaching before they hit the mean streets in the city. Not that I?m calling Tulsa city but when you come from Cherokee county, you might think so.
People with cognitive disabilities could be trained in safe situations until they could handle reality.
People with multiple disabilities could also have the same kind of training.
And regular old blind guys could do it just for fun.
Market this to sighted people as a new kind of video challenge and the price will come down fast. They could compete against real bind players and when scores. We could also make some NPC characters who are The kind of travelers we graduate from Louisiana Tech. Give everybody some real competition. Make NPC characters that remind us of a young Jeff Altman or Arlene hill. Since sighted people automatically assume they will be better than we are at most games and activities, this will give them a real challenge.
Imagine maniacal laughter in the background.
Jane Lansaw
from the world's smallest keyboard.
On May 16, 2018, at 10:09 AM, Dezman Jackson