fresh bytes
Subscribe Now

3D-printed music scores help the blind feel every note

3d-printed-music-score-uw-madison-scott-gordon.jpg

The University of Wisconsin’s Mechanical Engineering department is using its advanced selective laser sintering printer to make a wide range of intricate projects, including 3D music scores for the blind. The creation replaces Braille (which sometimes omits crucial details in music) with extruded versions of the same notes you see on regular sheets — you can interpret those arpeggios in the same way as any other performer, rather than learn a separate system. The university is still refining the concept, so it may take a while before blind virtuosos are using 3D sheets in concerts. You’d need an easy way to mass-produce them, for one thing. If the technology pans out, though, it could open doors for vision-impaired artists.
via Engadget

Continue reading 

Image: Scott Gordon

Leave a Reply

featured blogs
Feb 6, 2026
In which we meet a super-sized Arduino Uno that is making me drool with desire....

featured chalk talk

Bluetooth Channel Sounding
In this episode of Chalk Talk, Joel Kauppo from Nordic Semiconductor and Amelia Dalton explore the principles behind Bluetooth channel sounding, the differences between different channel sounding device types, and how Nordic Semiconductor’s high-performance, ultra-low-power Bluetooth SoC with integrated multi-purpose MCU and nRF Connect SDK v3.0.1 can get your next Bluetooth channel sounding design up and running in no time!
Jan 21, 2026
30,815 views