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  • bix6 · 3 days ago

    Big ups

    • toast0 · 3 days ago

      This is great. I knew a kiddo who had to use gaze to talk, due to paralysis, but it was all a bit cumbersome, so she didn't have her talk screen most of the time. I never did get to see how it was organized.

      Having something more personalized and hopefully less expensive / easier to bring with you sounds amazingly useful.

      • just-tom · 3 days ago

        I really did swallow a bit and looked at the ceiling reading this (at a public place).

        • tangenter · 3 days ago

          Finally some fucking hacker news.

          • anon7000 · 3 days ago

            Seriously, enough with the b2b SaaS, give us more shit that can make a positive dent on the world!

          • keiferski · 3 days ago

            A traditional AAC was way too abstract. My son has no clue that a red octagon means stop. He has no idea what stop even means in that context.

            When I travel, I really like looking at the public graphics for no parking, no entry, etc. Some places are basically just text, but others really have great little illustrations that communicate the message without needing words.

            For example – I think it was in France or Spain where the No Trespassing sign is an angry little yelling man with his hand up. It would be helpful if more public graphic designs made this much effort.

            • warumdarum · 3 days ago

              It often correlates with a publics literary rate. Which is why really international communication apps have photos for groupchats and speech samples.

                • keiferski · 3 days ago

                  Yep exactly. I was trying to find it on Google but couldn’t come up with anything.

              • BenChoopao · 3 days ago

                You made me cry too.

                • niksmather · 3 days ago

                  Great stuff - I really hope you manage to scale this up!

                  • telesilla · 3 days ago

                    I have close friends who have children with learning and behavior difficulties, this is an inspiring story that I hope leads to a new norm.

                    • IneffablePigeon · 3 days ago

                      My mother is a speech therapist. 20 years ago she used to bring these devices home to set up for kids she worked with and would get me to record the voice sometimes for her kids who had a similar voice to mine. Even then, as a child, it struck me how basic and expensive those things were.

                      The arrival of iPads was a wonderful thing for her, not because the functionality got better but because an iPad was far far cheaper than the array of 20 buttons with self-printed laminated labels she was using with most of her kids.

                      All that to say, this is fabulous, and well overdue.

                      • pbarondadditude · 3 days ago

                        As a vibe coder and a product guy trying to make the world a better place with tech, this is just the most inspiring stuff. Well done on doing this for you and your family and soon so many other families. This is what AI is for. Best thing I’ve read all year!!

                        • metaketa · 3 days ago

                          This is great! Never knew this AAC is a thing.

                          I happen to make an interactive pen platform (like TipToi but with an editor that allows one to design and publish their own books with logic, scripting, genai support), much like the author explained at the end; and the AAC is actually a perfect use case. You get everything the author described, but screen free!

                          • dmd · 3 days ago

                            > but sigh and accept that your wife is going to give your child a lot of “supplements” that you will then verify aren’t poisonous but also probably don’t do anything

                            This is weirdly misogynistic.

                            • RiverStone · 2 days ago

                              What is “hatred of women” about this?

                              Is it incorrect to say that more women are into astrology than men?

                              Is it then hatred to say that my wife is going to say something is due to astrology, and I will nod and say “sure dear” lovingly but know that it has absolutely nothing to do with astrology?

                              Likewise, women are probably more into supplements and holistic medicine than men, and there’s nothing “hatred of women” to observe that.