BRAILLE VS VISUAL

3,522
462
Joined
Sep 8, 2007
So my friends and I were watching the new Daredevil show on Netflix and noticed that Daredevil himself reads braille insanely fast (I know, it's hollywood)


BUT is it possible for someone to learn Braille and eventually read faster than someone who visually reads?

Bruhs we debated this for like an hour and never came to a conclusion.

I'm telling you, someone who reads braille can use eventually all their fingers and probably read like 2 pages at the same time.


What do y'all think?​
 
Last edited:
Those grapes got you working huh
laugh.gif
laugh.gif
 
speaking of...thought this was pretty cool...

Netflix gives blind fans of Daredevil the audio descriptions they asked for

Netflix is doing more to make its service accessible to blind customers and those who are visually impaired. Today, the company announced that it's rolling out audio descriptions, which are narration tracks that describe "what is happening on-screen, including physical actions, facial expressions, costumes, settings and scene changes." The first series to get audio descriptions is Netflix's newest (and very good) original series Daredevil, and it's something comic book fans have been asking for. To feature an original series starring a blind protagonist — while not doing all it could to accommodate blind customers — has recently put Netflix's lacking accessibility options through fresh scrutiny.

But the company says audio descriptions will quickly be expanded beyond just Daredevil to include House of Cards, Orange is the New Black, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, and Marco Polo. Narration tracks for those shows will be added in the "coming weeks," and Netflix says customers can access them like any other alternate audio track. Netflix isn't stopping with its own original programming though, pledging that it's "actively committed to increasing the number of audio-visual translations for movies and shows" in a blog post today. Discussions with studios and content owners to move that effort along are ongoing, and Netflix is "also exploring adding audio description into other languages in the future."

http://www.theverge.com/2015/4/14/8413569/netflix-daredevil-audio-descriptions-now-available
 
 
So my friends and I were watching the new Daredevil show on Netflix and noticed that Daredevil himself reads braille insanely fast (I know, it's hollywood)


BUT is it possible for someone to learn Braille and eventually read faster than someone who visually reads?

Bruhs we debated this for like an hour and never came to a conclusion.

I'm telling you, someone who reads braille can use eventually all their fingers and probably read like 2 pages at the same time.


What do y'all think?​
roll.gif
What? 
 
The idea of using both hands to read braille on separate pages sound ridiculous to me, but I don't know enough about braille or if the brain is capable of processing the information like that so its what ever 
laugh.gif
 
Bruh reading and to a lesser extent comprehension are somewhat linear. You can't just place your hand on a page and soak it all up simultaneously. 
laugh.gif
 
ever been with a girl that has those little bumps around their nipples and think "I wonder what this translates to in braille?"
 
Last edited:
braille around the nipples is alright. I can't read braille, but I know that braille around the genitals is probably bad.
 
Bruh reading and to a lesser extent comprehension are somewhat linear. You can't just place your hand on a page and soak it all up simultaneously. :lol:

Yup. :lol:

If projected two movies on a single screen would you be able to watch and comprehend two movies at once? no.
 
Back
Top Bottom