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A talking multimeter (mastrogippo.it)
56 points by sizzle on April 1, 2014 | hide | past | favorite | 17 comments



Neat software hack? Yes.

Neat hardware hack? Yes.

Use a meme image in a non-annoying way? Yes.

Help a person in need to create their own hacks? Yes.

Awesome submission.


glad it was well received! I've been submitting more hands on, hacked-together tech posts which resonate well with the HN community.


How... does this even work? How does a blind person construct an electrical circuit? How can they see the colors to determine a resistor, or read the capacitance on the side of a capacitor, or feel the little tiny circle that indicates which pin of an IC is pin 1? Or even just which wire is red and black?

I suppose this multimeter is the answer to which wire is red and black (is the voltage positive or negative). But I wonder about those other things.

I'm honestly just curious. And I feel bad for blind folks in one more way now.


It's also worth noting that not all usages of "blind", such as "legally blind", are the same as total blindness. It's conceivable that extremely poor vision (acquired through natural reasons or accident) could be just good enough to allow painstaking circuit construction with a magnifier.

I suppose a breadboard could be done by feel, as well.

Also, I'll quip that I've learned through hard experience not to trust that the red and black wires are used correctly. :-)


> feel the little tiny circle that indicates which pin of an IC is pin 1

kinda answered your own question there


Multimeters that measure resistance and capacitance are relatively common, so it presumably wouldn't be impossible to build a talking version. Ensuring that diodes and electrolytic capacitors are correctly orientated would be a challenge though.

Another problem for building anything other than simple circuits is obtaining reference material (pinouts, current/voltage limits, etc) in an accessible form. I don't know how much help screen readers would be for high-density information containing diagrams and graphs.


I can see a talking meter being useful for even sighted people. Often you have to take measurements in awkward positions (like working on a car) so it'd be useful to just hear what the reading is.


Or even those situations where your eyes and hands are focused on making sure the probes don't accidentally short something out and are in the right place.

I think having it talk continuously (with a short pause between each reading) would be better than having to actuate it manually.


In the video, he shows a small port and says that if you jumper it, it reads continuously.


Not sure if it's Fluke-only, but the "Touch Hold" on Fluke Meters is intended to do this -- capture a stable voltage, with a beep when it's got it. Had this explained by a Fluke rep in a room of engineers and techs who, along with me, went "ohhhhh."


They already solved that one. Fluke do a line of meters with remote displays.


I'm looking forward to the Mooshimeter Bluetooth multimeter, which will have an SDK: http://www.dragoninnovation.com/projects/34-mooshimeter

There's also a Seeed Studio one but it uses the serial port Bluetooth profile, so no iOS support: http://www.seeedstudio.com/wiki/Bluetooth_Multimeter


About the French pronunciation of "92", there is an alternative from Switzerland and Belgium: "nonante-deux". Basically, you can replace "soixante-dix" and "quatrevingt-dix" by "septante" [1] and "nonante" [2]. It is not widely used or even known in France, but it does exist.

On the other hand, there is still this "quatre-vingt" thing that made "octante" [3] disappear. It sounds complicated even to French people but they are used to it.

[1] https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/septante

[2] https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/nonante

[3] https://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/octante


The fact that you can "factorize" 92 into 4 x 20 + 12, means you need less samples, not more. Of course it also requires more and specialized logic in your program, which is the real problem.


Unfortunately, "quatrevingt" won't sound exactly like "quatre" followed by "vingt" (in "quatrevingt", you will make the sound for the "e" very clear while muting it in "quatre").

Of course, you could just use more developed algorithms to connect words but then why not just use a voice synthesizer base only on recorded syllables?


So you need the same number of samples whether you use 80+12 or 90+2.


Watch out with the yellow multimeters!!




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