Navigation app for people with intellectual disabilities wins Irish Dyson award

way2B is a smartphone and smartwatch solution with pre-programmed routes

Trinity graduates Talita Holzer Saad and Robbie Fryers with Patrick O’Shea and his father Pat O’Shea from Malahide who have been trialling the solution
Trinity graduates Talita Holzer Saad and Robbie Fryers with Patrick O’Shea and his father Pat O’Shea from Malahide who have been trialling the solution

A new software solution that helps people with intellectual disabilities navigate independently has won the Irish leg of the 2017 James Dyson Award.

Invented by two Trinity graduates, Talita Holzer Saad (26) and Robbie Fryers (24), way2B also integrates walking instructions with public transport and allows a carer to live track a user's location, heart rate and battery usage.

way2B is a smartphone and smartwatch solution, which allows carers to pre-programme set routes with turn-by-turn directions, which users can follow easily and independently.

way2B also integrates walking instructions with public transport and allows a carer to live track a user’s location, heart rate and battery usage
way2B also integrates walking instructions with public transport and allows a carer to live track a user’s location, heart rate and battery usage

Robbie from Belfast and Talita, originally from Brazil, were first inspired to invent a product that would integrate people with intellectual disabilities into society as Mechanical Engineering undergraduates.

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Nine prototypes later, the pair are still developing the final product, which is being trialled with six individuals who have Down syndrome in conjunction with their carers. They hope to launch a final product next year.

Invented by two Trinity graduates, Robbie Fryers (24)an Talita Holzer Saad (26), Way2B is a smartphone and smartwatch solution, which allows carers to pre-programme set routes with turn-by-turn directions
Invented by two Trinity graduates, Robbie Fryers (24)an Talita Holzer Saad (26), Way2B is a smartphone and smartwatch solution, which allows carers to pre-programme set routes with turn-by-turn directions

The pair will now proceed to the international stage of the competition and will compete against students from 23 different countries to win the overall James Dyson award and the grand prize of €35,000.

Dyson engineers will announce the top 20 international finalists on September 28th with the overall global winner will be selected by James Dyson the following month.

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor is a former Irish Times business journalist