Unfortunately, only a minority of blind people know and use braille. This is for a variety of reasons, but the most common are:
--many people become blind when they are elderly and do not want to take the time and effort to learn braille
--technology, especially recorded books and text-to-speech engines are replacing many documents that were previously provided in braille
--there are not enough braille teachers to instruct blind students now that most blind students are mainstreamed instead of being sent to special segregated residential schools for the blind
Braille.
About 150 million people use Braille today.
i think by writing it of course many people uses writing by creating songs
The letter A in braille uses a single dot in the upper left corner of the braille cell. All other braille letters use 2 or more dots.
Louis Braille, a French educator who was himself blind, developed the reading and writing system known as braille in the early 19th century. This system uses raised dots to represent letters, allowing blind individuals to read through touch.
Simon René Braille was a French inventor best known for creating the Braille system, a tactile writing system for the visually impaired. Developed in the early 19th century, Braille uses a combination of raised dots to represent letters and characters, allowing individuals who are blind or have low vision to read and write. His invention has had a profound impact on accessibility and education for the visually impaired community worldwide.
The dots you see around Hoenn are in Braille. It's a form of writing that uses combinations of dots to represent the letters in an alphabet, commonly used by the blind to communicate.
Louis Braille went to the Nation Institute for the Blind in Paris. They taught children to read by feeling raised letters. The institute had a limited amount of books on this system of writing and Braille read them all. However, he had no way of writing and would later create a system composed of six raised dots to allow him to communicate better. In 1821, Louis Braille was inspired by former French Army captain, Charles Barbier de la Serre. Serre visited Braille's school to show his invention of sonography, which was a form of night writing. This invention was based off a series of 12 raised dots and numbers, which allowed top-secret information to be transferred between soldiers on the battlefield, without talking. Braille was also inspired by a six sided dice and used a stitching awl and created a system composed of a similar method of raised dots. His method of language was a six dot system.
Louis Braille did not help the blind in 1929; he developed the Braille system for reading and writing in the early 19th century, specifically publishing his work in 1824. His system uses raised dots to represent letters and has significantly improved literacy and communication for visually impaired individuals. Braille's contributions laid the foundation for accessibility that continues to benefit the blind community today.
Although some guides capitalize it (for its developer Louis Braille), at least one US braille organization recommends that the lowercase be used. The National Federation of the Blind capitalizes it, but the Library of Congress uses both forms.
a braille printer produces braille printouts of computer files. It works in conjunction software that translates text to braille.It converts a computer file into a BRAILLE DOCUMENT.
Braille key. With each Pokemon Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald, FireRed and LeafGreen version, you should obtain a Braille Key in the box. This gives you the symbols and the letters they stand for - which are used in the game. If you do not have this, it is easy to find. Wikipedia gives a Braille key under the heading "Writting Braille". Pokemon only uses the alphabetic letters and the symbols for the full stop and the comma. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braille