Blind Inventor Creates WeWALK Smart Cane That Uses Google Maps To Help The Visually Impaired

Published October 9, 2019

"In these days we are talking about flying cars, but these people have been using just a plain stick."

Woman At A Crosswalk With Her WeWALK Smart Cane

WeWALK / TwitterThe WeWALK smart cane uses Bluetooth technology, Google Maps, and can connect to any other application.

Over 217 million people in the world are severely visually impaired or blind. This is also a world of continuous technologization, but it is somewhat surprising that high-tech assistance for the visually impaired took so long. Now, there’s a Bluetooth-enabled “smart cane” for the blind called WeWALK — and its goal is to completely transform the way the visually impaired navigate their world.

The WeWALK is a touchpad attachment that can be fastened to any cane, transforming it into a smart cane. It uses ultrasonic sensors to warn the user of nearby obstacles by vibrating the handle. These sensors detect not only ground-level hindrances but also objects hanging down at head or chest level.

It also features a USB input that can be used to charge the battery, with one full charge lasting up to five hours of usage time.

This smart cane can be paired with most Android and iOS-based smartphones, which means it can integrate with applications like Google maps for personalized step by step directions. It can also pair with ride-share apps like Uber and Lyft.

The smart cane can thus help those with visual impairments to more easily and independently travel, especially in big cities.

Blind Kids Try The WeWALK Smart Cane

WeWALK / Instagram Kids with visual impairments try out the smart cane.

Additionally, the WeWALK smart cane has a built-in speaker and microphone that works perfectly with Amazon’s Alexa. Plus, any new features will only require a regular software update to access. The possibilities are nearly endless for this open-platform software.

WeWALK raised over $94,000 within 48 hours of crowdfunding in its home country of Turkey. An Indiegogo page for the tool has raised in excess of an additional $54,000. These funds are being used to deliver advanced assistive technology to those in need. The affordability of the cane can be a challenge, as low income constitutes a majority of the visually impaired.

Inventor Smart Cane Stairs

WeWALK / InstagramThe inventor of the smart cane, Kürşat Ceylan, tests his innovative product.

But perhaps the most impressive aspect of this groundbreaking tool is how it came to be.

The WeWALK Smart Cane’s Impressive Background

The co-founder of WeWALK, Kürşat Ceylan, is visually impaired himself. Blind since birth, the engineer knew that connecting a cane to the internet would greatly improve the quality of living for those with little or no eyesight.

“In these days we are talking about flying cars,” Kürşat told CNN, “but these people have been using just a plain stick…As a blind person, when I am at the Metro station I don’t know which is my exit…I don’t know which bus is approaching…[or] which stores are around me. That kind of information can be provided with the WeWALK.”

Ceylan is also the CEO and co-founder of Young Guru Academy, a Turkish nonprofit established in 2000 intended to support future leaders who combine compassion with innovation, and he has also engineered more than just the smart cane to assist the visually impaired.

The WeWALK is expected to help the visually impaired to engage more fully with their surroundings.

In 2011, Ceylan helped to develop the smartphone app My Dream Companion which allows the blind to access several assistive technologies in one place.

These include access to audiobooks and magazines, indoor navigation such as subway stations and shopping centers, and a cinema enhancer.

The cinema enhancer app is particularly interesting as it provides an audio description of the silent scenes in movies with descriptive text. It works similarly to the Shazam music identification app.

Woman Uses WeWALK Smart Cane

WeWalk / Facebook The smart cane assists the blind through use of Google Maps and sensors.

The WeWALK does more than to assist in navigation, however. It also allows the user to fully engage with their surroundings. As Ceylon stated on the company’s blog, “full and equal participation in social life is an indispensable right for everyone.”

When the visually impaired have to focus a bit less on their surroundings, they can more freely socialize. The simple idea that expanding the amount of information a blind person can garner from their surroundings could be a virtual game-changer.

Similar Inventions To The WeWALK Smart Cane

While there is at least one other smart cane besides the WeWALK, there are other technologies available to better assist the blind.

Assisted Vision Glasses

Digital Trends / Dr. Stephen HicksAssisted-vision smart glasses are another way that technology is helping the blind the navigate their world.

Currently, engineers are working on assisted-vision smart glasses because the majority of visually-impaired people still have some remaining sight. “What we’re trying to do with the project is produce a pair of glasses that can enable someone who has got very little sight to allow them to walk around unfamiliar places, to recognize obstacles, and to get a greater independence,” Dr. Stephen Hicks from the University of Oxford told Digital Trends.

The folks at the MIT Media Lab have also created a chunky ring device called the FingerReader which is capable of detecting and interpreting 12-point printed text. The user simply has to scan their finger across the text and the ring will read it back to them aloud in real-time.

MIT Finger Reader

Digital Trends / Via MITThe FingerReader by the MIT Media Lab.

The WeWALK is currently available for purchase on its website for $499.


Next, read about how a Google smart home device prevented a domestic abuse tragedy. Then, learn about the blind man who summited Mount Everest.

author
Erin Kelly
author
An All That's Interesting writer since 2013, Erin Kelly focuses on historic places, natural wonders, environmental issues, and the world of science. Her work has also been featured in Smithsonian and she's designed several book covers in her career as a graphic artist.
editor
Leah Silverman
editor
A former associate editor for All That's Interesting, Leah Silverman holds a Master's in Fine Arts from Columbia University's Creative Writing Program and her work has appeared in Catapult, Town & Country, Women's Health, and Publishers Weekly.