It is well known that from the beginning of times people with disabilities have been the ones always left behind. Whether it be in politics, or media, or technology. Recently I was told that my daughter might have mild Autism, not a disability per se, but a condition somewhat challenging. These made me go a little deeper into researching where contactless technology can be of benefit for these group of people.
With Virtual Assistants like Google, Alexa, and Siri some things have changed. However, there still gaps to be filled. So far what I found where solutions where there had to be some contact from having to use an app to have another piece (smart white canes for blind people, smart watches with braille code on top, or smart glasses that allow blind people to "see:) but not much else. Now, these pieces of technology might be helpful for their everyday life needs but since they are a somewhat relatively new technology they are expensive and not everyone can afford them. Even with virtual assistant this technology still falls a little behind on disabled people needs. My goal is to have a solution that will be affordable and effective in the most essential and emergency needs. Through design I would like to find a way to use virtual assistants and phones (which are an "affordable" technology) in order to help the essential needs and most common difficulties disabled people can find like getting medical assistance when not able to call 911.