Student Creates Free, Open-Source App for People with Speech Disorders

鈥淚 wanted to make something that made a physical, tangible difference in people鈥檚 lives,鈥 3rd year Travis Smith says

Date

Author

By Olivia Dimmer
The device allows people who can't speak to combine words and phrases using a free, open-source app on a low-cost tablet

TRANSCRIPT


Travis Smith, Information Technology and Management Undergraduate Research Project (ITM 497) student (Computer Information Systems 3rd Year): So the inspiration behind my project actually came from a friend of mine. He has a younger brother, and in order for him to speak he uses an app on his iPad. And you not only have to buy the iPad, you also have to buy the app, and you also need internet. 

Well that kind of got me thinking: what about people who aren鈥檛 as fortunate? That they really can鈥檛 afford an iPad, the app, and they don鈥檛 have internet at all.

So what I made here is an open-source free version of that, that doesn't need internet at all. And my whole goal with this is to get this in the hands of people who are in third-world countries who don鈥檛 have internet.

This can be packaged up and shipped out, and they can use it right out of the box. And also for people here, they don鈥檛 have the luxury of going down to a store and buying a brand new iPad.

The first thing that I did was I researched all the parts in order to make this. It鈥檚 a Raspberry Pi 3, a touchscreen, and a portable battery pack. I then started programming it probably about a month and a half ago, and then I strictly worked on the software for it.

I鈥檇 say now it鈥檚 about 90 percent of the way done. I wanted to make something that actually made a physical, tangible difference in people鈥檚 lives. And I feel like this kind of encompasses all of that and everything that I鈥檝e really wanted to do.