YOUR FRIENDS' ACTIVITY

    CES 2013: The blind see, the deaf hear, the mute can be heard

    Virginia Heffernan is the national correspondent for Yahoo! News, covering culture and politics from a digital perspective. She wrote extensively on Internet culture during her eight years as a staff writer for The New York Times, and she has also worked at Harper’s, the New Yorker and Slate. Her book, “Magic and Loss: The Pleasures of the Internet,” is forthcoming from Simon & Schuster.

    By Virginia Heffernan

    We often think of technology as something that makes us more than human. Marshall McLuhan, the freaky philosopher of television and other 20th-century developments, called media the “extensions of man.” The suggestion is that tech accelerates our pace, furthers our reach, amplifies our voice.

    It also threatens to turn humankind into a horrifying super-race of cyborgs. The “extended” us, goes the evergreen argument, is, paradoxically, far more distractible/obese/stupid than we were when we were just plain flesh and blood with a stone tool and maybe a cornhusk doll.

    That’s frightening. And interesting. Which is why books about the hideous consequences of technology will not stop. They themselves are a technology designed to help us live more meaningfully with machines.

    But what about technology designed merely to bring us up to par, to give standard human capabilities to those who lack them? I’m thinking of devices designed to help the mute talk, the deaf hear and the blind see.

    At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, which ends Friday, we’ve seen our share of monster TVs and oversize superphones. But we’ve also seen eye-tracking, 3-D headphones and voice technology that can read anything you write in your voice. All this stuff was originally developed for the disabled, and creating it ended up alighting on whole new models of how our senses work.

    The eye, according to the latest research, is better thought of as an antenna than a camera. It’s a sensor—liquidy, squishy, hypersensitive. The latest bionic eye, working off this model, allows the blind to see in grayscale in 576 pixels.

    Hearing, too, is being rethought. The new 3-D headphones, first made for the hearing-impaired, have necessitated the first headphone patent since in the 1920s. They don’t divide sound into stereo—they wrap it around the head where different frequencies hit the brain from a spectrum of angles.

    And finally, the voice. In 2006, the movie critic Roger Ebert lost his voice box to thyroid cancer. But recordings of his voice were subsequently digitized and turned into all possible English sounds. He can now type words and have them said aloud—in his own voice.

    Why couldn’t we all do this? The Ebert technology has been extended by some entrepreneurs to handily turn text into speech—anyone’s speech. Soon you’ll be able to have a book or article read to you by almost anyone you choose.

    That doesn’t sound so frightening. It sounds exciting—and, in the right situations, potentially miraculous.

    More from CES: The smart watch, tablet batteries, and more:

    • Even Cavendish surprised by fourth stage win

      By Alasdair and Fotheringham CHERASCO, Italy, May 17 - A series of small but challenging climbs late on Friday's stage of the 2012 Giro d'Italia could not stop Britain's Mark Cavendish taking his fourth stage win and second in two days. Italy's Vincenzo Nibali remained overall leader but it was sprinter Cavendish who stole the show again after compatriot and pre-race favorite Bradley Wiggins failed to start the 254 kilometer stage, the longest in this year's Giro. In a bunch sprint finish Cavendish outgunned Italy's Giacomo Nizzolo and Slovenia's Luka Mezgec. ...

    • Soccer-Ferguson criticises City for Mancini sacking

      LONDON, May 18 (Reuters) - Manchester United's outgoing manager Alex Ferguson has criticised neighbours Manchester City for sacking Roberto Mancini. The Italian boss was sacked on Monday having failed to retain the Premier League title he won last season and after losing the FA Cup final to Wigan Athletic. Mancini took out a full-page advertisement in the Manchester Evening News on Saturday, thanking fans for their support during his time in charge. ...

    • NYers furious over photos taken through windows

      In one photo, a woman is on all fours, presumably picking something up, her posterior pressed against a glass window. Another photo shows a couple in bathrobes, their feet touching beneath a table. And ...

    • Bea Arthur topless painting fetches $1.9M in NYC

      A painting of actress Bea Arthur topless has sold for $1.9 million at a New York City auction. The painting is by artist John Currin and is titled "Bea Arthur Naked." It sold at Christie's auction ...

    • This Child Made a Film About His School Lunch—and He Titled It ‘Yuck.’ (VIDEO)

      When fourth grader Zachary Maxwell started nagging his parents to let him bring his own lunch to school, they knew something was up. Zachary was served lunch every day in his New York City public school and because it was a hot lunch, his parents were insistent he take advantage of it.

    • Cycling-Ailing Wiggins, Hesjedal abandon Giro d'Italia

      (updates with quotes, details, adds byline) * Chest infection worsens, forcing Wiggins to withdraw * Defending champion Hesjedal also out * Italy's Nibali leads as Uran takes over as Team Sky leader By Alasdair Fotheringham BUSSETO, Italy, May 17 (Reuters) - This year's Giro d'Italia claimed two major victims when pre-race favourite Bradley Wiggins and defending champion Ryder Hesjedal withdrew prior to Friday's 13th stage, the pair citing illness as the reason for abandoning the tour. ...

    • Alaska volcano shoots lava up hundreds of feet

      Alaska's remote Pavlof Volcano was shooting lava hundreds of feet into the air, but its ash plume was thinning Saturday and no longer making it dangerous for airplanes to fly nearby.

    • A record Powerball jackpot isn't a record to celebrate

      When the 43-state Powerball lottery jackpot hit a record at $600 million Friday, many Americans who would otherwise not gamble rushed out to buy the $2 tickets. “Just on the off-chance,” many probably said.

    Follow Yahoo! News

    Loading...