TEDxKC speaker Shantanu Bala: Tech moves communication beyond words
August 23, 2017 | Startland News Staff
Editor’s note: Startland News is exploring a few of the most impactful quotes from speakers at Friday’s TEDxKC event at the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts.
“The blind cannot only lead the blind, but lead any of us who can see to experiences that we’ve never seen before.”
— Shantanu Bala
Think about the technology you interact with on a day-to-day basis, Somatic Labs founder Shantanu Bala encouraged the TEDxKC audience.
“You’re probably looking at a screen, whether that’s a laptop, a smartphone or a tablet. You’re checking emails, notifications, messages or alerts,” he said. “A lot of this information is presented in a context that is inaccessible to someone who’s blind.”
Although modern technology users have access to a new era of voice-controlled interfaces, like Alexa, Siri and the Google Assistant, such artificial intelligences that respond to speech also add another channel of disruption and intrusion, Bala said.
Communication involves a lot more than just words, he said.
“Even if you’re not bilingual, you all understand a second language. You understand the meaning of a handshake or a warm hug. You understand to pull your hand away from a hot stove,” Bala said. “And you understand this faster than you can read words printed on a page or even hear them spoken out loud.”
For any of the 285 million people in the world who are blind, a task as ordinary as checking the time can involve asking another person or turning up the volume on a phone and having it yell out that information, he explained.
“This is a cumbersome experience and it’s an accessibility problem, but I would also question the necessity of occupying anyone’s eyes or ears when we can intuitively understand things that we grasp with our hands,” Bala said.
Imagine if you treated your entire body as a programmable computer, he challenged the crowd.
Bala’s Somatic Labs offers software and hardware products that aim to enable a future of wearable devices that communicate through human feeling and touch.
“I’ve spent past eight years working on systems of silent and invisible communication because I believe the same computer interface that could help someone who’s blind to check the time without needing a pair of headphones, is the same interface that could power the future of human-computer interaction,” he said.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
How a KC partnership helped Idle Smart avoid a cold start that could’ve stalled its recovery
Editor’s note: The following story is sponsored by Academy Bank, a Kansas City based community bank, and is part of a series of features spotlighting some of the bank’s startup and small business partners. Wasted time is wasted money — a notion at the forefront of Idle Smart, a Kansas City IoT tech company built…
This KC kombucha brewer brought back North America’s most mysterious tropical fruit; the time to taste it is ripe now
When the forest starts to smell like bananas, it means the pawpaws are ready for harvesting, Amy Goldman shared. “I’d never heard of pawpaws until last year when one of our farmer friends brought us a bunch of them. We tried them in our kombucha, and it sold out so fast. It was incredible. But…
A service you never knew you needed: Buying chickens from a vending machine at the Mayor’s Christmas Tree
As children gave life to the ice terrace above Friday, volunteers and shoppers were giving light to local and global charities at a newly placed installation of vending machines — stocked with donation opportunities, not snacks — at Crown Center. The hottest “selling” item so far in Kansas City: a trio of chickens for $18. Three Giving…
New nonprofit surprises first-ever $20K ‘changemaker’ grant winner; he already knows how he’ll invest it
Pastor Adrian Roberson was initially too stunned to speak Thursday when he was awarded a $20,000 grant for KC United — a youth sports initiative he co-founded in 2009 with his wife Vicky. But the duo already have plans for the money: spreading blessings. “I want to say, ‘Glory to God,’” Adrian Roberson shared moments after…



















