Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Now, Software To Print 3D Maps For The Blind!

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 24 Sep, 2014 12:10 PM
    Japan's cartographic authorities have announced the development of software that allows one to download data from the internet and using a 3D printer, produce geographical maps of the country for the visually impaired at an economical cost.
     
    The Geospatial Information Authority of Japan (GSI), attached to the ministry of land, infrastructure, transport and tourism, will work with experts from different regions on the development phase.
     
    This is to ensure that highways, walkways or railway lines are well-differentiated in the final product, reported the digital edition of the Asahi daily Wednesday.
     
    The programme's data will allow one to print streets having a height of one mm that can be easily detected with the fingers.
     
    A professor at Niigata University, who is participating in the creation of the software, explained to the newspaper that if they also managed to introduce topographical characteristics such as uneven surfaces and hills, these maps could be used in courses for the blind focused on emergencies and evacuations in the case of an earthquake or a tsunami.
     
    Once the software is developed, all the cartographic data of Japan needed to create such maps will be available on the internet.
     
    Maps for urban zones will have a scale of 1:2.5 (1 cm equals 25 m) while those of rural areas will be in the scale of 1:25 (1 cm equals 250 m).
     
    The maps will be printed on resin sheets of 15 x 15 cm costing $1.40 per unit.
     
    The printers needed to print the maps cost between $552 and $644 in Japan.
     
    GSI explained that given the popularisation of 3D printers, it would also offer data in the future to develop maps of very specific places at prior request.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Indian start-ups have huge advantage over other countries: Microsoft

    Indian start-ups have huge advantage over other countries: Microsoft
    India has some of the world's best developers and they have huge advantage over start-ups in other countries, believes Microsoft, engaged in developing, licensing and supporting a range of software products and services.

    Indian start-ups have huge advantage over other countries: Microsoft

    Here comes NASA suit for men on Mars

    Here comes NASA suit for men on Mars
    With the focus being shifted to a manned mission for Mars in near future, NASA is developing technologies astronauts one day will use to live and work with on the red planet.

    Here comes NASA suit for men on Mars

    Move effortlessly in apps world with Facebook

    Move effortlessly in apps world with Facebook
    Billed as a game changer in the mobile industry, Facebook has unveiled a new free and open-source service that would make it easier for you to navigate from one app to another and back again.

    Move effortlessly in apps world with Facebook

    What you were waiting for, a self-driving car

    What you were waiting for, a self-driving car
    “We have improved our software so it can detect hundreds of distinct objects simultaneously - pedestrians, buses, a stop sign held up by a crossing guard, or a cyclist making gestures that indicate a possible turn,” Chris Urmson, who leads Google’s self-driving car programme, wrote in a blog post.  

    What you were waiting for, a self-driving car

    Do you believe it! A computer mouse that can also scan

    Do you believe it! A computer mouse that can also scan
    MobScan has built-in technologies that helps to scan as well as edit the scanned material.

    Do you believe it! A computer mouse that can also scan

    Australian varsity signs MoU with two oldest IITs

    Australian varsity signs MoU with two oldest IITs
    In a bid to strengthen relationship with India in the areas of research and teaching, an Australian university has signed agreements with two Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs).

    Australian varsity signs MoU with two oldest IITs