Shaikh lost the use of his eyes when he was just seven years old.
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Shortly after, Shaikh was introduced to talking computers at a school for the blind. This inspired him to become a programmer.
Shaikh has been working at Microsoft for the last 10 years as a software engineer.
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He's been working on an idea he's had since his college days: an app that can tell you at any moment what's going on around you.
Shaikh teamed up with like-minded engineers to work on this very app using Microsoft's intelligence APIs.
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The app, called Seeing AI, works on smartphones as well as Pivothead's SMART glasses, pictured here. Just a simple swipe forward on the glasses tells you what you're looking at.
"I think it's a man jumping through the air doing a trick on a skateboard," Microsoft's AI says.
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This also has applications for things like working in groups.
The Seeing AI app can tell you whether or not people are really listening to what you're saying, and it can describe the general age and gender of the people around you, as well as their emotions.
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I see two faces: 40-year-old man with a beard looking surprised; 20-year-old woman looking happy.
The app is also good at reading out text.
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You can use the app to take a picture of the text, and the app will actually guide you to ensure you're capturing the full text of what you're looking at.
"Move camera to the bottom right and away from the document," Microsoft's AI says.
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Once you take the picture, Microsoft's AI will recognize the text. It can even identify and read back headings in case you don't want to know about every single item on a restaurant's menu, for example.
Years ago, this was science fiction," Shaikh says. "I never thought it would be something you could actually do, but artificial intelligence is improving at an ever faster rate and I'm really excited to see where we can take this.
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You can check out the full video of Microsoft's Seeing AI app here.