Raising the Dots

Dot Inc.

Meet the people, ideas and tech shaping the future of braille and tactile literacy. Whether it's help with a Dot product or service, connecting with touch readers and experts from around the world, or learning about related research, this podcast offers fascinating discussion and thought-provoking insights that will leave you informed and inspired about the freedom and independence that comes from reading by touch.

Episodes

  1. Learning Braille Against the Odds

    APR 14

    Learning Braille Against the Odds

    Before our featured interview, we share a couple of announcements from Dot. 1. There is an update to the free Dot Book reading app designed to be used with Dot Pad. Now available for iPhone and iPad, Dot Book now includes the ability to render up to 10 lines of braille improving fluency and context. You can download Dot Book from the App Store. ‎Dot Book App - App Store 2. On April 27th 2026 Dot will host a webinar to demonstrate support coming to the BrailleSense notetaker for Dot Pad. We hope you can join us. 3. During the final week of May 2026 Dot will be exhibiting at Sight City in Germany. We hope you can meet us there. For more news and events follow Dot on social media or visit our blog: blog.dotincorp.com For any questions about a Dot product email info@dotincorp.com In this episode, we hear a powerful and moving story of braille education from North Africa. Samira Mohamed Lamin was born in 1995 in Smara, one of the Sahrawi refugee camps in Tindouf, Algeria. At the age of 6, she traveled to Spain for the first time to receive treatment for glaucoma. From then on, she continued traveling to Spain and undergoing treatments and surgeries to slow the progression of the disease. At the age of 17, she became blind due to complications in accessing the necessary treatment in the refugee camps. At that age, she returned to Barcelona, Spain, where she spent three years learning Braille, mobility and orientation techniques, and daily living skills at the Spanish National Organisation of the Blind (ONCE). At the age of 20, she returned to the refugee camps, and in 2024 she decided to create the Himma Association to raise awareness among the Sahrawi society about the importance of education and autonomy for people with disabilities in the camps. She also volunteers at a school in Smara, teaching Braille and tactile literacy to blind children. Learn more about this project by writing to asociacionhimma@gmail.com

    26 min
  2. JAWS For Windows Supports Multiline Braille

    09/10/2025

    JAWS For Windows Supports Multiline Braille

    Announcing JAWS screen reading software Support for multiline braille, meeting braille readers in Singapore and finding out how to get involved in research in to braille and quality of life. This month Raising the Dots comes from the 11th General Assembly of the World Blind Union (WBU), where visitors from around the planet have been getting hands on with Dot Pad X. Learn more about the World Blindness Summit & WBU General Assembly https://wbu.ngo/events/world-blindness-summit-wbu-general-assembly JAWS Screen Reading Software for Microsoft Windows has introduced support for multiline braille, including Dot Pad X. Download JAWS and find out what else is new here. https://support.freedomscientific.com/Downloads/JAWS We are joined by Gary from Dot Inc or shares more about the Dot Pad X support found in JAWS. If you have questions you can write to info@dotincorp.com If you want to know more about Dot Pad X multiline braille and tactile graphics display you can do that here. https://www.dotincorp.com/en/product/dotpadx Visitors to the Singapore Association of the Visually Handicapped. recently had chance to get hands on with Dot Pad X for the first time. We here from braille users who share their reaction and what braille and tactile graphics means to them. https://savh.org.sg/ Aasha Rose is a braille teacher, trainer, braille specialist and PHD candidate studying at the University of Southern Queensland. Aasha's research is exploring the relationship between braille literacy and quality of life. You can get involved by writing to aasha.rose@usq.edu.au Since recording, Aasha started a new job as braille instructor for Adelaide-based See Differently, previously known as the Royal Society for the Blind. https://seedifferently.org.au/

    39 min

About

Meet the people, ideas and tech shaping the future of braille and tactile literacy. Whether it's help with a Dot product or service, connecting with touch readers and experts from around the world, or learning about related research, this podcast offers fascinating discussion and thought-provoking insights that will leave you informed and inspired about the freedom and independence that comes from reading by touch.

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