Last night on Radio 4 (UK) I heard an article about digital radio and the blind, with the complaint that whilst radio is a natural medium for the blind, digital radios aren't very user friendly for the visually impaired . This would require a bit of technology for the digital radio (less so for the conventional type) but I see it as a large tunning dial that when pressed in adds a tone depending on where you are on the frequency scale. The same feature could be adapted to use a text reader to read the digital display aloud if pressed and held with no turning-- dare99, Feb 06 2002 I heard the same prog. The main compaint seemed to be that much information was posted on an LCD panel that could not be read by a blind person. They mentioned the idea of pushing a button and chucking the contents of the panel through a speech chip on the programme.
The tuner dial would need a different approach on digital radio. As I understand the DAB standard, the radio channels are virtual so you don't actually tune into a frequency -- you just pick up a load of data and choose the channel you want to listen to.-- st3f, Feb 06 2002 "Voice" Indicator & User Voice Actuator for dialing in.-- thumbwax, Feb 06 2002 If the assumption is that the operator knows what frequency they want, just give them a Braille keypad to punch it in on (or in on which to punch it).-- phoenix, Feb 06 2002 random, halfbakery