logo
From beauty to gaming: How smart tech is quietly transforming accessibility

From beauty to gaming: How smart tech is quietly transforming accessibility

The National18 hours ago
More than 1.3 billion people globally – about 16 per cent of the world's population – live with some form of disability, according to the World Health Organisation. That includes a broad range of physical, sensory, cognitive and age-related conditions.
Among them, millions live with limited mobility or fine motor challenges, impairments that can make routine tasks like styling hair, applying make-up, or playing video games significantly more difficult.
Innovative consumer technology is now helping people with disabilities gain more independence, confidence and control, often without being explicitly marketed as assistive. Tools from Dyson, L'Oréal, and Microsoft are leading a shift towards inclusive design, proving that innovation for the mainstream can also empower those at the margins.
'It's not about whether I can do something – it's about whether a product allows me to do it efficiently, independently and with the same experience as everyone else,' Jessica Smith, a disability advocate born without a left forearm, tells The National.
An empowering styling tool
Ms Smith has been using the new Dyson Airwrap i.d., a hair styling tool that uses sensors, airflow control and app-based settings to simplify the process of curling and drying hair. She says it's one of the few beauty tools that feels like it was made with people like her in mind.
'The ability to style hair with one hand more seamlessly is a game-changer,' she adds. 'It's exciting to see how it can support my routine.'
According to Dyson, the product's accessibility benefits weren't part of the original design brief but emerged organically through efforts to make styling easier for all users.
'The brief was always to make styling and curling hair more convenient and easier for everyone, not necessarily catering to users with disabilities,' Low Chen Nyeow, associate design manager at Dyson Beauty, tells The National. The Airwrap i.d. connects to an app that automates different steps in the styling process, which is helpful for people with limited mobility.
'It removes the need for them to continually press the power button during the styling process as well as hold the cool shot button down,' Ms Nyeow said. In addition, the device's self-wrapping barrels and personalised presets cut manual efforts by users.
'Hair gets wrapped automatically, even without the user feeding a hair tress to the barrel,' she added. 'The personalised curling sequence simplifies usage and allows users to tailor their styling experience without needing to hold multiple buttons down.'
Ms Smith said she hopes more companies follow Dyson's example, even if inclusivity isn't their starting point.
'Inclusion should be the standard, not an afterthought,' she says. 'Beauty and personal care are a huge part of people's confidence and self-expression, but for too long, brands have overlooked the needs of disabled consumers. That's how innovation truly meets our needs.'
At Dyson, accessibility remains a vital area of continuing research. 'Although we do not have immediate plans to integrate voice or gesture controls into beauty tools, our research teams are investigating how emerging technologies could be incorporated in the future,' Ms Nyeow says.
Growing market with untapped potential
Assistive technology is a rapidly growing sector focused on enhancing the quality of life for people with disabilities or age-related limitations. It includes products, devices, and software that support users in performing everyday tasks, from communication and mobility to personal care and digital access.
The global assistive technology market is projected to reach $41 billion by 2033, from $26.8 billion in 2024, according to market research company Imarc Group. Much of this growth comes from specialised companies focused on health care, mobility, and communication.
For example, Sweden's Tobii Dynavox Global develops eye-tracking and speech-generating devices for people with neurological conditions. The US company Ekso Bionics develops wearable exoskeletons that enable individuals with paralysis or mobility impairments to walk again. Aira Technologies is another innovator, offering real-time visual assistance through smart glasses for people who are blind or visually impaired.
Mainstream brands like Dyson, L'Oréal, and Microsoft are contributing to the space. Their consumer-first innovations, while not always designed with disability in mind, are proving to be inclusive by default, showing that accessible design can have the most significant impact when it's built for everyone.
Innovative make up
L'Oréal's HAPTA, an innovative lipstick applicator for people with limited hand or arm mobility, is an example.
With its launch in January 2023 at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, L'Oréal put inclusive design at the centre of innovation.
The device uses sensors and gyroscopic technology to stabilise motion, helping users apply make-up without requiring a full range of movement.
According to a company statement, HAPTA was developed to meet the needs of an estimated 50 million people worldwide who live with limited motor skills. This condition can make daily tasks, such as applying make-up, especially difficult.
The hand-held applicator incorporates technology initially developed by Verily to stabilise utensils for people with mobility impairments, now adapted to beauty routines.
'Inclusivity is at the heart of our innovation and beauty tech strategy,' Barbara Lavernos, the company's deputy chief executive in charge of research, innovation, and technology said in a statement at the launch.
HAPTA features customisable attachments and built-in smart motion controls to increase range of motion and ease of use.
It features a magnetic rotating head that provides 360 degrees of rotation and 180 degrees of flexion, enabling users to save preferred positions for future use.
'With HAPTA, we are going one step further by making beauty more accessible to use because everyone should have equal access to it,' Françoise Lehmann, Lancôme global brand president, said at the time.
Gaming for all
In the gaming world, Microsoft's Xbox Adaptive Controller has become a leading example of how mainstream tech can deliver powerful accessibility.
Designed for players with limited mobility, the device features oversized buttons and multiple input ports that connect to custom accessories, including foot pedals, switches, and sip-and-puff systems.
These features enable users to personalise their gaming experience according to their physical needs.
'The goal of the Xbox Adaptive Controller is to remove that barrier. We strive to make Xbox the most accessible gaming platform on the market,' Microsoft said in its fact sheet on the device. 'The Xbox Adaptive Controller provides a much-needed, simple, and affordable solution for gamers with limited mobility.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Daily Affirmation for July 27, 2025 to Kickstart Your Vibe
Daily Affirmation for July 27, 2025 to Kickstart Your Vibe

UAE Moments

time5 hours ago

  • UAE Moments

Daily Affirmation for July 27, 2025 to Kickstart Your Vibe

✨ Today's Affirmation: "I trust the timing of my life and welcome every new beginning with an open heart." ? Vibe Check: Feeling a little restless? Like you're stuck in that weird in-between of wanting more but not sure how or when it's coming? Totally normal. Today's cosmic whisper: Trust that everything is unfolding even when it feels like you're standing still. You're not behind. You're exactly on time. Why This Works: When you're craving change, it's tempting to force things to happen ASAP. But growth — real, soul-deep growth — is more like a sunrise than a light switch. This affirmation reminds you that patience is progress, and your heart knows the way. Your Mini Mission: Ease into trust today with these tiny steps: – Write down three small wins you've had in the past month (they count, even if they feel tiny). – Practice saying out loud: 'I am on my own timeline, and that's enough.' – Pause before rushing a decision — give yourself permission to feel ready before moving forward. Power Up Playlist: Songs for trusting your glow-up season: 'Good as Hell' – Lizzo 'Hold On' – Wilson Phillips 'Shake It Out' – Florence + The Machine 'Dog Days Are Over' – Florence + The Machine 'Brave' – Sara Bareilles Bonus Energy Tip: Wear or carry a piece of moonstone today. Moonstone is the ultimate "trust the process" stone — it encourages intuition, patience, and flow. Whenever you feel anxious about the future, touch it and repeat: "New beginnings are always on my side."

Wrench attacks drive crypto investors to centralized custodians
Wrench attacks drive crypto investors to centralized custodians

Crypto Insight

time6 hours ago

  • Crypto Insight

Wrench attacks drive crypto investors to centralized custodians

Crypto custodians are reporting increased interest in their services amid the rising frequency of so-called '$5 wrench attacks' on cryptocurrency traders, investors and project leaders. In the last year, several high-profile wrench attacks — physical attempts to steal someone's crypto — have targeted prominent investors and business executives in the blockchain industry. The crypto mantra of 'not your keys, not your coins' has lost its power among some investors who fear for their personal safety. Cold wallets may offer full control over digital assets, but they also present a single point of attack. As crypto adoption grows, and wrench attacks persist with the proliferation of more high-value crypto investors, custodians are seeing a shift in preference from self-custody to institutional control. Crypto wrench attacks drive security demand Wrench attacks are nothing new. Jameson Lopp, a Bitcoin advocate and chief technology officer of Bitcoin wallet Casa, published a GitHub repository logging hundreds of such incidents since 2014 — and those were only the ones reported in the news. In the last two to three years, as crypto adoption has sped up and become more mainstream than ever, attacks have grown more public and sophisticated. In January 2025, the founder of crypto wallet Ledger and his wife, David and Amandine Balland, were kidnapped, taken to separate locations and held at ransom. Just months later, the daughter of an exchange founder barely fought off attackers who attempted to kidnap her in a van on the streets of Paris. Concern over the rise in attacks and their similar methods led French Interior Minister Bruno Retailleau to meet with cryptocurrency professionals to discuss the issue. As concern over these attacks grows, crypto custodians are noticing an uptick in interest in their services. Emma Shi, over-the-counter and institutional sales director of HashKey, which offers custody and exchange services, told Cointelegraph, 'We're absolutely seeing rising retail anxiety translate into meaningful inflows. Wealthier retail investors are increasingly approaching regulated custodians after high-profile cases like the recent Manhattan kidnapping, where physical coercion was used to access private keys.' Shi said HashKey's custody business has noted increased interest in storage from 'family offices, crypto-native high-net-worth individuals and even those with nest eggs that are large enough to be vulnerable to theft.' Cold wallets have long been lauded by crypto advocates as a way to give investors full control over their assets and to keep them maximally secure offline. However, this single key also provides a 'single point of failure,' per Wade Wang, CEO of multiparty computation (MPC) crypto custody service Safeheron. Wang said that there is a 'flight to security' among crypto investors, where holders 'are actively seeking innovative solutions that eliminate that single point of failure to significantly raise the bar for attacking.' Already in 2023, a report from PricewaterhouseCoopers on the state of digital custody noted the challenge of cold wallets being prone to theft or loss. One solution posited in the report was MPC or multisignature wallet options. Can custody services stop wrench attacks? Crypto self-custody, while boasting a new technology, runs into the same problem as treasure hoarders throughout history — they were vulnerable to physical attacks and theft until they could share that risk with a stronger and securer institution like a bank. Robbing a bank is a lot harder than robbing a person. In the same fashion, crypto investors are now seeking to 'raise the cost' of the $5 wrench attack. Wang said that investors wish to 'return to the fundamental principle: making the cost for an attacker rise exponentially. For example, when it costs $3 million to steal $10 million, the incentive for attack is lost.' Third-party custody can achieve this and mitigate the problem of wrench attacks, adding time-locks and layers of approval and shifting the target from an individual to the custodian's employees. 'But it is not an optimal solution,' per Wang. Trust is still put in a single, centralized institution and, as exemplified by the recent breaches at Coinbase and Bybit, even major regulated crypto businesses are vulnerable to employee misconduct and phishing. Wang suggested that distributed custody, such as MPC, 'is a superior solution because it fundamentally solves the problem. The core principle of MPC is to use technology to decentralize the single point of control and risk […] into a 'multiparty' structure.' In such a system, control doesn't belong to any one person, and transferring funds requires complex consensus protocols from multiple parties. Decentralized solutions may better reflect the ethos of the blockchain industry, but 'we cannot neglect the benefits of centralized custodians,' Wang said. 'Reliable security measures bring better assurance of keeping clients' assets safe, a familiar way of doing things for lots of new crypto players.' Centralized or decentralized, crypto investors could still be at risk if the public image of crypto investors is that they are all walking around with cold wallets full of Bitcoin. Shi said, 'The perception of risk matters, too. Attackers often assume holders store funds themselves, so public awareness that more crypto is held in custodial solutions may deter opportunistic assaults.' Wrench attacks a 'temporary problem' solved by adoption Public perception is indeed changing. Retail investors are increasingly making crypto part of their portfolio, according to a 2024 report from Ernst & Young. New regulations in large financial markets like the EU and the US are creating the frameworks necessary for institutional investors to get involved. This regulatory shift has been good for the custody industry as well, as it 'legitimizes professional custody for everyday investors and is leading to more offerings from not only crypto-native firms but traditional banks as well,' said Shi. 'We're seeing crypto adoption accelerate in regions with regulatory clarity, which creates entirely new custody considerations for investors who previously relied solely on self-custody solutions.' Regulations also raise the stakes of wrench attacks, per Wang. Better regulatory frameworks with more jurisdictions 'proactively setting robust regulations' will 'inevitably lead to more severe law enforcement actions, which will significantly increase the cost of such attacks and fundamentally curb such behaviors.' 'We see the physical attacking as a temporary challenge,' Wang concluded. The crypto industry has evolved through many stages, but the rise of wrench attacks on prominent investors and executives shows that it has yet to reach the maturity of traditional financial markets. In the meantime, executives are not only moving their assets to centralized and decentralized custodians but also finding muscle of their own. Personal security firms have also seen an uptick in interest from crypto's elite to protect their homes and persons. Source:

India's TCS to cut 12,000 jobs as demand contracts
India's TCS to cut 12,000 jobs as demand contracts

Khaleej Times

time8 hours ago

  • Khaleej Times

India's TCS to cut 12,000 jobs as demand contracts

Indian IT giant Tata Consultancy Services said on Sunday it will cut around two percent of its global workforce, or about 12,000 jobs, as demand contracts in the sector it leads. The software services firm — India's largest by market cap — said the reductions would mainly affect employees in middle and senior roles and would be rolled out over the course of this year. TCS employs 613,000 people worldwide, and the IT services sector is one of India's biggest employers and revenue earners. The company said the move was part of efforts to become a "future-ready" organisation as it enters new markets and scales up its use of artificial intelligence. "As part of this journey, we will also be releasing associates from the organisation whose deployment may not be feasible," TCS said in a statement. It said the restructuring was being carried out with "due care" to avoid disruption to client services. After TCS's June-quarter revenue fell short of expectations, CEO K Krithivasan said this month that "continued global macro-economic and geopolitical uncertainties caused a demand contraction". IT services are the most visible part of India's modern economy and historically one of its biggest white-collar job creators, driving the expansion of the middle class. But a slowdown in the sector has seen hundreds of thousands of new graduates struggle to find work.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store