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Google Android Technology

Google's Live Transcribe and Sound Amplifier Aim To Help the Hard of Hearing (cnet.com) 30

Google wants to make Android phones powerful tools for people who are deaf or hard of hearing. From a report: On Monday, the search giant released two new services, Live Transcribe and Sound Amplifier, aimed at helping people who have trouble hearing communicate more easily. Live Transcribe does exactly what its name suggests -- it uses your phone's mic to automatically generate captions that appear on your screen. With Sound Amplifier, you can use your phone and a set of headphones to improve the clarity of the speech around you. To develop the new products, Google said it worked with Gallaudet University, the private school in Washington, DC for people who are deaf or hard of hearing.
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Google's Live Transcribe and Sound Amplifier Aim To Help the Hard of Hearing

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  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Monday February 04, 2019 @12:50PM (#58068316)
  • I would like to get a lot better auto generated subs n YouTube.
    • by nwaack ( 3482871 )
      This. So much this. Sometimes when I'm bored I'll turn on the auto-generated CC in a few YouTube videos just for a good laugh.
  • by ScooterComputer ( 10306 ) on Monday February 04, 2019 @12:54PM (#58068348)

    I applaud Google in their efforts here, but as a current iPhone user, I'm saddened to see it as something I can't/won't immediately be able to take advantage of. What frustrates me--as an Apple customer, as a "fan" of Apple's Accessibility work, and as one of those 466 million hard-of-hearing folks--is the difficulty I have personally had in getting Apple to understand hearing impairment, and to take it more seriously than they do. Apple seems to be of the mind that hearing impairment can be and is resolved with hearing aids, which to those in the know is absurd. Perhaps, though, Google's initiatives will help Apple see what additional work could be done to improve their ecosystem for hard-of-hearing users, not just the specific subset of the hearing-impaired population that can benefit from hearing aids.

    • by drinkypoo ( 153816 ) <drink@hyperlogos.org> on Monday February 04, 2019 @01:04PM (#58068438) Homepage Journal

      Don't applaud too loudly Google's efforts to get more people to willingly turn their cellphones into even more of a spy device.

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Apple's position on hearing impairment and their phone is "you're hearing it wrong".
    • If Google actually cares about helping people, and not just using it as a Cash grab to get a group of people to switch to Google. I don't see why Google cannot release an iOS app. Google and Microsoft does have a set of Apps for iOS as well as for Android.
      The real question goes into how Google expect to monetize the technology.

    • I dunno, iPhone is pretty good about working with my hearing aids, and has had Live Listen for a while now, which is the 'pipe the iPhone mic through to the hearing aids' thing. The live closed-caption thing sounds cool, though.
  • Will this be used to better target ads to deaf people?
  • Doesn't work for me and that accessibility button was right on top of the keyboard enter key so I turned it off.
  • To be stored forever and data-mined to the nines. Google does nothing for others, everything it does is just to make its elite even more filthy rich.

  • I have hearing loss and tinnitus in my right ear. A hearing aid was going to cost over $1,000 (after insurance reduced the cost) so I tried less expensive options first. White noise applications on a bluetooth headset reduced the ringing but blocked me from hearing through my right ear. I tried some "sound booster" apps but there was a delay. Not a big delay, but enough to be frustrating. Sort of like the stereotypical badly dubbed Japanese movie. {mouth moves} "How are {mouth stops moving} you doing?" Befo

    • by bobby ( 109046 )

      Some tinnitus is mental / neural; some is caused by infection. Hopefully you're seeking very competent medical help / tests?

      Sadly my mom suffered from hearing loss (which significantly impacted her life) that might have been lessened or stopped if it had been caught years before. One of the symptoms showed up on a head CT showing some bone loss that was attributed to an inner-ear infection that can spread.

      I occasionally get some perceived tinnitus that I attribute to a combination of not enough sleep and

      • I had a hearing test by an audiologist that showed significant hearing loss in the ear with the ringing. This might be genetic (as my mother has tinnitus as well) or just due to old age (which still feels odd to say given that I'm 43). Luckily, a second test a year later didn't show any additional hearing loss. Everything was exactly the same so we're hoping that this isn't going to get worse.

        I believe that some "OTC hearing amplifiers" are being approved to help with the cost of hearing aids. These wouldn'

        • by bobby ( 109046 )

          I'm sorry you're having this loss at such a young age. I'm a good bit older and regularly run (mix) sound (and I'm pretty good at very gentle augmentation of classical, to full-on rock). I haven't had my hearing tested, but I don't perceive it to be any worse than when I was 20, and now that I've gotten into audio work, I ardently/fiercely protect my hearing.

          I know they're pricey but you've bypassed the world of junk hearing aids, and some argue that the super-cheap ones can do more damage.

          I'm much more c

  • That's more likely what they want to do: have 100% access to the conversations of deaf people.

You know, the difference between this company and the Titanic is that the Titanic had paying customers.

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