LipSync Update: It’s about more than just tapping the screen
With the LipSync, we’ve built in a few different functions to mimic those hand gestures with a sip and puff device.
We use technology, knowledge and passion to empower Canadians with disabilities.
Skip to NavigationWith the LipSync, we’ve built in a few different functions to mimic those hand gestures with a sip and puff device.
Grant Pearson, a Professional Engineer and the Vice President of Business Development for an arctic construction company, lives with an inherited, degenerative eye disease called Retinitis Pigmentosa.
We are excited to tell you about the first “homebuilt” LipSync – the first one made outside of our initiatives.
While the ubiquitous smartphone has become an invaluable tool around the globe, many people with quadriplegia or any other disability that limits hand function believe the technology has passed them by.
We’re in Philadelphia this week at the 2017 AOTA (American Occupational Therapists Association) Annual Conference. In front of over 13,000 occupational therapists, we are promoting the LipSync and “making” to create access solutions for people with disabilities.