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There's a service for blind people called Be My Eyes. It's an app that you put on your phone. If you're blind or visually impaired and you're going about your day and you need assistance with something, you can click call and it'll put you in contact with a volunteer who can view the camera on your phone in real time and tell you the prices of things in the grocery store or pick out the proper color of shoes out of your closet or whatever. Read the A and B on the back of a packaging for cooking instructions. Like they can help you with a lot of stuff, but you're using your phone, right? So the Be My Eyes crowd and the Meta crowd have come up. Now you can use those Meta AI glasses to incorporate hands-free the Be My Eyes service without even having to pull your phone out of your pocket. And I was thinking to myself, this would be absolutely life-changing. Like how many times do I run across stuff that I just can't see what I'm doing or working on and pull out a magnifier and it's just a vignette. But these glasses are like a grand. And I was thinking to myself, this is an accessibility tool, but it's priced out of most people's ability that how practical is it really? But I looked at some videos, man oh man oh man. The things that this Be My Eyes service with the Meta glasses can do is incredible. You can be walking down the street and all of a sudden if you can't see a traffic light, you can hit the button, you can say, let me know when the light turns red or let me know when the walk sign comes up. And someone on the other end sitting in front of a computer can say, yep, the light's green now, go ahead, walk. And you'll be safe. Or you're going to cook something and you don't know the instructions. You just press the button and you hold it up in front of your eyes and all of a sudden someone can read it and verbalize what it says in your ears. That has to be the best and coolest thing for accessibility that I've ever heard of. But it's priced outside my range. Like everything else, it's a simple monocular, which I used to find very beneficial back in the day for seeing distance. Now I just use my phone. But those things are several hundred dollars. I mean, everything is just priced so high. And especially things that could help people are priced so high. So I don't understand it. Other than corporate greed, like I said, and if you're an early adopter, of course you're taking on the costs of R&D and all of that kind of stuff. And I mean, I didn't do that. Let me reset.
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