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FOThis video of the SignAloud gloves (often attributed to MIT students because of the prize they won) is a masterclass in solving a “Human Friction” problem.
The 99% see a “cool gadget.” The 1% see the elimination of a communication barrier for 70 million people. Created by Thomas Pryor and Navid Azodi (winners of the Lemelson-MIT Student Prize), these gloves don’t just track movement; they translate the complex, nuanced gestures of American Sign Language (ASL) into spoken English in real-time.
The end of the language barrier is being coded right now. 🦾🗣️
While the world is distracted by AI chatbots that write poetry, these builders used AI to give a voice to the silent. By using a network of sensors and “Statistical Regression” (similar to a neural network), the system maps hand positions to words instantly.
The Signal:
• Real-Time Latency: Near-instant translation from gesture to speech.
• Ergonomic Design: Built to be worn like a hearing aid or contact lenses—not a bulky computer.
• Neural Mapping: Deciphers X, Y, and Z coordinates of every finger move.
• The Mission: Proving that communication isn’t a privilege—it’s a fundamental human right.
The tools changed. The goal is the same: Building a world where everyone can be heard.
Mega Prompts link in bio
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