Robert Palmquist wants to improve the world's communication by translating a sentence at a time.
Palmquist's company, Northfield-based SpeechGear, recently launched a $795 software package that allows people who are deaf or hard of hearing to better communicate with people who may not know sign language.
The software, called Interact-AS, allow users to type or write words and have them read aloud by the computer. The software also picks up what is being verbally said by others and immediately translates it into text for the user to read on the computer screen.
"It's a good thing when people can talk with each other," Palmquist said.
Already, the product is being sold by five distributors, including Eden Prairie-based Harris Communications, one of the largest distributors of products for the deaf and hard of hearing, and has been used by Northfield Public Schools.
The company is in discussions with venture capital funds to raise $2 million in the next three months and plans to be profitable later this year, Palmquist said. So far, several hundred copies of Interact-AS have been sold, he said.
The school district said it is in the process of implementing the software and has had success with the product in special education. For example, a student who had trouble communicating in writing would often have to wait for an instructor to help him.
By using Interact-AS, the student was able to immediately say aloud the answers to questions on a worksheet and have them transcribed by the software, officials said. The district is also using other SpeechGear software to help communicate with foreign language speakers.