That’s what we were taught at school. Only carry 1,5,&10 fold a bill in half. Another the opposite way in half and leave the other unfolded. I have the money reader now so it helps.
The bill reader isn’t something they are carrying around. It’s to mark bills at home. If I mark them wrongly and hand it to them they will think it’s the higher amount. Blind people just have to have a lot of faith in people and sometimes they do get scammed. Luckily today with cards it’s less of a issue and easy to get a refund if you got scammed by a cashier by calling your cc
@@ya8158the blind person is the one marking it. Notice how on the marking tool it has braille for each bills number. Thus, they mark it themselves, they feel the bill that is marked when they give it to someone or pay, and then they know they have the right amount. Now to make sure they aren’t scammed at a store, they would have to carry the bill reader.
My grandma was blind due to diabetes. She would ask me what her bills were and she would fold them a certain way to be able to tell them apart. She would also feel for the ridges on dimes to tell them apart from Pennie’s. RIP grandma love you.
Adding that u have to calculate and remember ur numbers every time because u can't go back and look over your calculations adding that you could forget as well and ud start over😳
Fun Fact: Australia was the first country to add braille to their bank notes. Because they invented the technology used to make plastic bills. They later sold the technology to other countries.
@@okotte9150 *WRONG!* I know for a *FACT* it was made in Australia. My ex works in the *patent office. & processed the international patient for it. *Corrected for spelling error because a bunch of grammar Näzi's can't accept that dyslexic is a real disability. & have to mock & attack people with it. I'm dyslexic one of the symptoms of dyslexia is misspellt words. If you don't like it & want to be a grammar Näzi then bite me! 🖕
I knew a blind merchant years ago. He could tell the denomination of the currency just by the way it felt. He said anyone could do it if they had the patience.😊
@@devocionn our money is plastic very durable thay last longer than paper. The brail nodes are quit pronounced. As money gets back to a bank any defective currency is removed from circulation.
@@adendronH Germany has the Euro and there are haptic marks on the left side with different spacings for each note. And the sizes are also different... Not braille but still feelable
I once met a blind cashier who worked at a lunch cafeteria. She was able to quickly and easily distinguish paper money denominations just by a quick rub between her index finger and thumb but the most impressive skill was her ability to correctly call out the total of any coins dropped on that tile floor before they stopped moving. She couldn't drive but she sure as chit was not handicapped.
I had to go to the local IRS office a few times during college to get a copy of my 1040ez. Each time, I was helped by an old, blind woman using a computer with a tactile keypad and what I assume was a screen equivalent. Ever see those people that can type 100+ words per minute without breaking a sweat? That was her, but possibly pushing 60ish and completely blind. It was impressive.
@@lajoyalobos2009 On [traditional] keyboards the "f" key and the "h" key have a raised line on them, so the typist can position their left & right index fingers on those keys, respectively, which then place the other fingers on the a,s & d keys ( left hand) and the j, k, & l keys (right hand), allowing each hand to access half the keyboard (& each finger of each hand to easily access keys from the go, middle, and bottom row in their respective "area")... This USED to be taught in schools back in the day , but this was also back when schools used to teach students to write in cursive...
Yes, form a committee in D.C., to take years to do nothing, blame the other party, then let a simple directive make it happen. Is this history or ESP ?
In most countries the notes are different sizes. The lower denomination the smaller the note. Also the notes are distictive colours so the partially sightex can recognise them.
@@hannahfau6137 uk notes are different sizes with the note size increasing with each denomination. They also have braille markings which i think is the numerical value All the coins van also be distinguished by feel alone.
@@Ida-AdrianaYes they are. I went there a month ago with my dad and he showed me the different bills and sizes. They bigger the denomination the bigger the bill
@@nagitokomaeda161 Oh dear, I’m embarrassed by my mistake! I actually am british (now) so I should know this, since I’ve lived here longer than anywhere else. But I haven’t seen cash in a long while. And I have autism and ADHD so inside my brain is a hot mess. Thank you for correcting me ☺️
I’m not blind, but I’m planning on getting one of the braille markers for all my cash. You never know where that 5 dollars is going. I’d love to help others, even if I don’t need to.
@@victoriahasenmueller1480 Oh my God, as if that's any sort of standardised way for blind people to read the bills. That feel wears off as the bill circulates.
I think I saw a What Would You Do episode like that. They had a lady go into a bakery either pretending to be blind or they got a blind actress and they had her pay with the wrong dollar bills and had the cashier (also an actor) not correct her and keep the bigger notes to see if any other people at the bakery would speak up. She paid with a 50 when she only needed a 20 and he gave her change as though she'd used the 20. It was really interesting as a staged episode, but sad to think that this happens to people with whatever level of impaired vision. It's sick
Malaysian money has braille and the size of each money value is made different so that the blind people know the value. not only that, the texture of each money is also made different to make it easier for the blind.
A local shop owner around here is blind, when people hand him 1 dollar bills and tell him its a 20, they get kicked out. Never underestimate a blind person, they live in the dark, so they see EVERYTHING.
@@RivkaranGrewal what if they killed him and stole all his cash. At least they paid 1$ so they're better than a total thief and murder right? But they're still an asshole and the blind person can hear them enter. You can probably get away with stealing something but then again he could have someone checking the tapes every day
My parents are brazilian so I visit brazil a lot. But here in the US I feel like they don't accommodate for people with disabilities like Brazilians do. I went to brazil with my blind sister, her also blind husband, and their kids. Their kids can see but they are just kids so I'm guiding all of them with all of our luggage. 2 employees came to help me with the carts and the luggage. Got back to the states no help, had to pay for the carts, asked a cop for directions he said ask someone else I'm here to stop bad guys not help you🤡. In brazil a cop went out of his way to help us. Latin countries just have a lot more love for each other.
@kag427 Wait, how did you know they said they were blind if you're blind too? Cuz you said you can't read it, but you're blind "too"... Oh btw, I'm also blind and have no clue what either of you said.
I always remember that scene in “Ray”. As Ray travels on the road, he demands to be paid in single dollar bills so no one can cheat him (since he cannot see the paper notes of the cash). I think cash should already have braille on them when they are made.
Here in Europe, bills have slightly different sizes so blind people can notice. Also coins have small indentations on the edges, so they can be easily identified.
@@konstant_ly no, the reason coins have edging is because back in the day when coins were made of precious metals people would shave them for flakes of the metal, the ridges ensure you can tell if someone has done this. Now it’s mostly for the blind though
In the UK, paper money already has braille on it and each denomination is in different sizes to assist those who have visual impairments. This is also the same for many other countries.
@@baraitalo along the left edge as you look at the queen's side. its also one of the things to check for security. if your notes (the new plastic ones, paper ones are no longer legal tender) are missing the braille, they are fake
@@MalcolmCooks aaaah i had to go and look it up! the 10s, 20s, 50s, have different patterns of dots in squares, and the 5s haven't. it's not actually braille though. thanks for info i'd never have noticed otherwise!
In the UK, each note already has braille and are categorised by size (the smallest note, the £5, is the smallest size going up to £50 which is the largest)
The United States is supposed to be changing the money for the blind. It's long overdue. I am going to buy one of those braille money markers and imprint all of the cash I use. I know it sounds crazy but I always worry about visually impaired people being taken advantage of.
@@simpan197 We dont have a £1 note. stoped beeing used in 1988s an is nolonger legal tender. We use a £1 coin. I think Scotland still has a £1 note but I've never seen one so duno if it has braille on it
I find it strange that a modern nation like the US doesn’t already print braille on their notes as standard instead of expecting a blind person to pay extra for devices to do it themselves
Especially since theres even braile in my local middle school on every door. How do we have the money for that but not the money for money? Honestly this country is broke💀
Never let anyone fool you that the US is a modern nation. We don't have safe drinking water almsot anywhere in the country, even with lower standards than most other modern countries. Our federally mandated minimum wage is more than 150% below the poverty level (and it is legal for an employer to pay even lower in certain circumstances.) Our medical care has been in constant decline for the last 10 years or so and has never been more expensive. Most Americans cannot afford healthcare and don't recieve it unless it's a life or death scenario. Most Americans are in thousands and thousands of debt, despite not being able to afford a home or car payment. Never let anyone fool you this is a nice place to live. It's all fake Hollywood bullshit.
@@domenik8339 that’s why it’s so strange people risk their lives illegally crossing borders to live here right? They just just go back to their war torn shitholes, it’s better than the US! /s
In Malaysia, the money was braille ready. I never realised that until one of my friends that are half blind told me how she checked her money balance by feeling the dots on the bill. I'm quite thankful my country really thinks about the disabled people and making their daily life easier
Polish banknotes (polski złoty) have relief printing on it (shapes like square or circle), but it goes flat with time so... But for example euro banknotes have different sizes, escalating to value
Fun Fact: Canadian Bills have braille already on them. Edit: Wow, looking at all the replies it’s like pretty much every country has braille on their bills BUT the United States lmao
I recall a story about a blind man who had a newsstand in an office building. He put people on their honor to tell him how much they paid, and was asked once how much he lost from people misleading him. He said it actually worked the other way, and there were often $5 bills in his singles tray. This was back in a prior century.
I've just came back from a trip overseas and I'll never take Australian's colourful notes for granted anymore. The distinct colours of each note makes it so so easy to pull out the right one from the wallet
My favourite part of being Australian is the money; not only did we invent the polymer note, but we basically led innovation in cash security, fraud detection, accessibility, etc. It's also beautiful and contains a lot of important historical and cultural references.
@@andregrubert1560 quite an astute observation and pray tell how exactly did you come to this thrilling observation and the purpose there in of pointing it out.
In Canada the "paper" bills (I don't think it's actually paper) just come with braille on them. It's actually a decent way to see if your money is legit because it's hard to fake well
Yes this would be a neat feature to have on US currency and yet another way to curb counterfeiting. I wonder if it has ever been suggested to the US Treasury Department
In Brazil they simple make money diferent sizes. They are also diferent colors so people that don't know how to read, have bad eye sign or children can identify it better and simple helps everybody. (I teach this one time to a blind elderly man )
thats not a bad idea. I make a lot of cash tips, maybe Ill start doing it to circulate a lot. It would also force seeing people to consider their blind brethen I wonder if theres a standardized spot for the braille?
I remember going to court years ago for a ticket and stopped in the store that was in the lobby. Much to my surprise, the cashier was blind. He had some device like this that he'd put the bills in and it would tell him the denomination.
@@joshuaanderson7511What job should they get then? Inclusivity and good design helps everyone. If everyone can participate and be a productive member, it benefits all of us
Australian bank notes are the most advanced in the world. They are made of polymer plastic, have holograms of wildlife, the extremely fine lines all match up perfectly when rolled into a cigar-like tube, they have clear sections and opaque sections, and ALL are marked with braille to tell their denominations. There are other countries that have similar qualities, but you will find that these notes are made in Australia.
UK notes also have all these. Polymer plastic. Holographic that when you shine a laser into it projects an image Clear space Braille Fine intricate patterns. Images within images. These are made in the UK. Australia pioneered the technology tho. Personally i hate the notes cause they stick together when damp or wet and you could end up handing over more money than you intended. Secondly when they're try they easily blow away or slip out of your pocket.
@@thedailyruns6046 Modern polymer banknotes were first developed by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation or CSIRO and first issued as currency in Australia during 1988, 18 years before Mexico. Australia developed the concept, and so were certainly the first. We produce notes for other countries. If you use this technology, your country purchased the ability to do so from Australia. Please don't tell me to come out of my island. It's a bloody CONTINENT mate.
I find it weird that money in the US does not have this by default. Here in SA, all our bank notes have a piece that feels different for each type. It is for elderly people who can't see very well and don't want to give a R200 instead of a R20.
Here In america you can scratch the shirts of the presidents for texture and each presidents shirt is a different size so they can tell what amount they have without needing this
It does but it’s hard to tell the difference between certain notes (£10vs£5) I’m pretty sure it has braille though? Lemme check 😂 Edit: Yh we have braille for notes £10 and above. Not £5 though.
They have tactile features on the new polymer notes. Nothing on the £5 4 dots in a square on the £10 2x 4 dot squares on the £20 Not actually seen a new £50 since nobody uses them so I don't know
Banknotes in Scotland already have braille. They are also different sizes, different bright colours and the numbers are large. How is this not a thing in USA?
In Europe we just have bills of all different sizes and feelable patterns on it so you can feel the difference. I'm not blind or whatsoever but even I don't have to look at the bill to know what value it has.
I'm from Brazil. The bills here have different sizes and marks. The minimum size difference is enough to blind people to differentiate each bill value. For not blind person is harder because we don't have so much touch skills as blind people because we see the values anyway. The bad side of marks and braile is that with time as bills are in use many times, the paper loses those marks.
Canadien money comes with brail. And it has English and French languages on it, as well as pictures of individual people from history for each bill. And also every bill has its own colour so we can tell what it is a mile away. $5=blue $10=purple $20=green $50=red $100=light brown It’s also waterproof. And if you hold a bill up to the light and look through the clear part, you’ll see $ flouting around whatever light source you look at.
In Poland we have different symbols for the bills, square for 10, circle for 20, diamond for 50, cross for 100, triangle for 200 and 8 small boxes for 500 polish złoty. (500 PLN is different due to relative recent design as it was introduced in 2017). Also size of the banknote is different depending on the value, higher value = bigger size
@@CMC369 you can have the bank notes be all different sizes of rectangle, that's what we do in the UK too. The coins are also different sizes and shapes
@@comosaycomosah It’s a bit messed up that you think mental illness is something that is within people’s control. People with mental illnesses deserve support and inclusion just as much as people with visible disabilities.
It's not Braille. It's just different dots for different notes. If you could read braille then the notes wouldn't mean anything. Just makes it easier for blind people.
@@MrMortyBaby the way it happened to me wasn't exactly peaceful so I'd rather not have a second go at it lol. Involved a car and around 1lb of glass in and behind my eyes.
I saw a video from a Canadian blind girl who showed their bills are marked in Braille. She also explained that since most visually impaired people actually can't read Braille, they use a "full block" system so each block of dots means a different bill (one block is $5, two blocks is $10, etc.)
In India currency notes have different sizes and colours so that the illiterate can tell them apart. Also, the newly printed notes are coded for the blind to feel and know the value.
When he said "this is a short demo" he REALLY meant it.
Short & sweet :)
123likes
i’d say it’s pretty average tbh
@@Daddy_With_A_Fattylong, even
@@HalonicYTit also has a great personality
I marked all my $1s, with $100 braille. This way when I’m sad and crying cuz I’m broke, I touch my $1 bills and all of a sudden I feel rich.
And somehow you were able to make this comment
@@float506 you should know what ur talking about, there are many ways of leaving a comment when blind
@@awtg1200 by using echo location
@@float506 he never said he was blind. average american iq.
@@float506 yes definitely
My grandma was blind and she used to just ask someone in the family what it was and then she just folded it a certain way to where she would know.
Damn smart
That’s what we were taught at school. Only carry 1,5,&10 fold a bill in half. Another the opposite way in half and leave the other unfolded. I have the money reader now so it helps.
@@Shana_Fana87wait if your blind , how are you ? You know what Nevermind.
@@haydenharless864 girl I think they use a screen reader
@@haydenharless864blind people can type comments you know
Videos like these makes me recount my blessings
Beautiful
This would save a lot of people from being scammed!
You know you can just put a 20 into a 1 dollar
@@RandomDudeIGuessThe bill reader would still detect it as a 1
The bill reader isn’t something they are carrying around. It’s to mark bills at home. If I mark them wrongly and hand it to them they will think it’s the higher amount. Blind people just have to have a lot of faith in people and sometimes they do get scammed. Luckily today with cards it’s less of a issue and easy to get a refund if you got scammed by a cashier by calling your cc
@@ya8158I mean they can carry it
@@ya8158the blind person is the one marking it.
Notice how on the marking tool it has braille for each bills number. Thus, they mark it themselves, they feel the bill that is marked when they give it to someone or pay, and then they know they have the right amount.
Now to make sure they aren’t scammed at a store, they would have to carry the bill reader.
As a Canadian, it is really odd that the bills aren't just marked with Braille when printed, but then I recall they're not made of plastic.
canadian here as well and i thought the same thing !
But can have raised ink printing on paper as well
@@pradyumnac That's good news! If only more places would be considerate of blind folks and their cash.
@@FloofyPoofyFox euros have that i use it to know if they are fake
They had it on the paper ones to I can remember it!
My grandma was blind due to diabetes. She would ask me what her bills were and she would fold them a certain way to be able to tell them apart. She would also feel for the ridges on dimes to tell them apart from Pennie’s. RIP grandma love you.
May your grandma rest in peace
@@Niuskayz Thank you
Rest In Peace.
❤
I'm sorry for your loss.
Why does youtube think I’m blind??? This is the fourth short related to blindness I’ve gotten.
Istg 😂 I've been getting non stop blind shorts that I keep liking cuz they're interesting so yt might think I am blind 💀
Preparation for the future.
well, it's always good to learn about experiences different than your own
I don't think you're seeing what TH-cam sees...
Take it as a sign
Here in Australia, our notes have brail markings as well as being physically different sizes to help those with vision issues.
yes. that is true
Another reason us Aussies are awesome
Same goes to my country too!!!
How is your pet king kong and godzilla sized spider
@@snuuy0I ate them
See my anxiety would not allow this if i was blind, it’d be like “are you sure you didnt mark the 1$ bill as a 20$ on accident
You would have less to stress about if you were blind
bro just stop being cringe
Adding that u have to calculate and remember ur numbers every time because u can't go back and look over your calculations adding that you could forget as well and ud start over😳
Def on accident.
Search about Indian currency note.
Fun Fact: Australia was the first country to add braille to their bank notes. Because they invented the technology used to make plastic bills. They later sold the technology to other countries.
They didn’t invent it, Romania did 🤦🏾♂️
@@okotte9150 *WRONG!* I know for a *FACT* it was made in Australia. My ex works in the *patent office. & processed the international patient for it.
*Corrected for spelling error because a bunch of grammar Näzi's can't accept that dyslexic is a real disability. & have to mock & attack people with it. I'm dyslexic one of the symptoms of dyslexia is misspellt words. If you don't like it & want to be a grammar Näzi then bite me! 🖕
@@itwasagoodideaatthetime7980 patent?
Some Australian dude once proudly showed my sister one of those notes and challenged her to rip it. He shouldn’t have done that.
@@o0blubblub0o No way, bet she couldn't rip tin foil! 🤣
I knew a blind merchant years ago. He could tell the denomination of the currency just by the way it felt. He said anyone could do it if they had the patience.😊
shouldn't be necessary
as a Zimbabwean, you don't even need to mark your bills with braille as all of them have the same value.
Really??
What the same value of practically nothing? The locals shouldn't have chased of all the farmers and they might still have had an economy. 😂
Rhodesia was such a better place
kkkkkkkk usatidaro wangu
@@KatyloveheartIt's true; they're all worth approximately quarter the value of a square of 1-ply toilet paper.
In Australia, the notes have braille already added when they are made
Edit: yo guys chill I did not mean to start a war in the replies
I was going to say that too .
I’m genuinely curious - how durable is this? Does it actually last?
@@devocionn our money is plastic very durable thay last longer than paper. The brail nodes are quit pronounced. As money gets back to a bank any defective currency is removed from circulation.
@@devocionn our money by every metric is actually stronger then yours
@@mickhannett5858 i see thanks!
Our Australian money already comes with brielle. But our money already comes in different sizes.
same In india
… and nobody in the real world cares!
@@cm0cm Blind people sure do
Spot on legend!
@@cm0cm Ohhh you're a bit salty I see
I need to show this video to my blind grandpa ASAP
How did he feel after he SAW this video?
Meanwhile, other countries just print braille into it in the first place
You can't stack cash with Braille. One side goes thicker then the other side its retarded
@@adendronH
Germany has the Euro and there are haptic marks on the left side with different spacings for each note. And the sizes are also different... Not braille but still feelable
@@adendronH Germans have Euros, and Euros are build to be easily be told apart even By blind people
@@adendronH
Our country just put dots to easily identify banknotes (for polymer ones only).
Most countries don't.
I once met a blind cashier who worked at a lunch cafeteria. She was able to quickly and easily distinguish paper money denominations just by a quick rub between her index finger and thumb but the most impressive skill was her ability to correctly call out the total of any coins dropped on that tile floor before they stopped moving.
She couldn't drive but she sure as chit was not handicapped.
I had to go to the local IRS office a few times during college to get a copy of my 1040ez. Each time, I was helped by an old, blind woman using a computer with a tactile keypad and what I assume was a screen equivalent. Ever see those people that can type 100+ words per minute without breaking a sweat? That was her, but possibly pushing 60ish and completely blind. It was impressive.
@@lajoyalobos2009
On [traditional] keyboards the "f" key and the "h" key have a raised line on them, so the typist can position their left & right index fingers on those keys, respectively, which then place the other fingers on the a,s & d keys ( left hand) and the j, k, & l keys (right hand), allowing each hand to access half the keyboard (& each finger of each hand to easily access keys from the go, middle, and bottom row in their respective "area")...
This USED to be taught in schools back in the day , but this was also back when schools used to teach students to write in cursive...
That's pretty impressive that she could identify what denomination the bills were by touching them...
@@joemartinez6790you mean F and J, not H
@@joemartinez6790also American schools don't teach cursive???
I just realized this should totally be a thing when they're printed
it's already a thing. a number of countries mint their cash with braille
Yes, form a committee in D.C., to take years to do nothing, blame the other party, then let a simple directive make it happen. Is this history or ESP ?
Unfortunately it would probably cause tons of problems with storing cash and also render useless every vending machine made before it started.
In Canada it is
@geochonker905no it wouldnt. It works in vending machines no problem. Some bills have worse damage then a few raised dots lol
I don’t even need braille and am going to get this to start marking all of my bills💚
Here in Australia all our money already has indicators for the blind as well as being different colours for those with some sight left.
Doesn't this method damage the note as shown in the video
@@TheArccore it's done with plastic or polymers, not just the punch
Australia is not Austria
@@bam38 Mate I think I know the name of my own country
@@TheArccore POV sighted person calls adding braille "damaging" the bill
Accessibility doesn't hurt you lmao, get over it
US: we heave a fancy device that can tell the bank note.
Every other country: just add Braille / marks on the note as it is produced
and have the bills in diferent sizes and colours so that you can differenciate thm better
Ah yes. Print more money.
@@AnAmericanMusician whilst destroying the old notes
In Brazil our notes have different sizes from 2 to 200 and it have a bar scheme that changes for every note
@@burgerpommes2001 i understand different sizes but... different colours? Isn't it for blind people?
As a blind person, that orange brail machine has a very nice color to it
DANG I’M POPULAR
Btw this was sarcasm, I’m not blind
How do you see the color if you're blind? Am I missing sarcasm?
@@michyyauwly3463 omg 🤦♂️
@@michyyauwly3463 blind people can see only colours, didn't you know that?
@@justin.g25 i thought blind people could see only
@@Francisco43212 i thought blind people could see
This video made me to feel more empathetic to blind people ✌🏻🙂
Me with my canadian bills: look what they have to do to mimic a fraction of my power
Which is convenient, considering your bills have a fraction of the financial power of ours.
@@liamwayne6703 yeah its because shit is more expensive in america for no reason 💀
@@liamwayne6703 The fraction in question: 50/69. Also we have free health care and cheaper schools..
@@analyzers9335 but thats higher taxes in turn
@@the_irs_real I wish I was Canadian because then I could have a better stereo type
In most countries the notes are different sizes. The lower denomination the smaller the note. Also the notes are distictive colours so the partially sightex can recognise them.
That can help the seeing but none of that will help the blind, maybe the different sizes if its very distinct.
@@hannahfau6137 uk notes are different sizes with the note size increasing with each denomination. They also have braille markings which i think is the numerical value
All the coins van also be distinguished by feel alone.
@@richardseed8253uk notes are not different sizes, wtf are you on about?
@@Ida-AdrianaYes they are. I went there a month ago with my dad and he showed me the different bills and sizes. They bigger the denomination the bigger the bill
@@nagitokomaeda161 Oh dear, I’m embarrassed by my mistake! I actually am british (now) so I should know this, since I’ve lived here longer than anywhere else. But I haven’t seen cash in a long while. And I have autism and ADHD so inside my brain is a hot mess. Thank you for correcting me ☺️
This feels like something that should already be on every bill
It is for most countries, I think the US just don’t give a shit lol
We have plastic ones now this would mess them up eek
Tactile print or embossing to help tell them apart? Yes, it should, and most currencies do use such features.
@@kikilocket yeah, unfortunately the US really doesn't care for people with disabilities and health conditions.
It is in normal countries.
I’m not blind, but I’m planning on getting one of the braille markers for all my cash. You never know where that 5 dollars is going. I’d love to help others, even if I don’t need to.
How the US doesn't just have braille on its bills already is wild.
It does hello everyone it’s had braille all along 😂
The Presidents' collars are raised ink in all different shapes and sizes.
@@victoriahasenmueller1480 Oh my God, as if that's any sort of standardised way for blind people to read the bills. That feel wears off as the bill circulates.
@@TheWinstonDoubleand braille wouldn’t?
@@vitocattivo No, have you never seen a brailled note? The bumps last pretty long. Long after the feel of ink stays on.
I'd feel more disdain for someone who intentionally short changed a blind person during a transaction than if they just straight up robbed them
bro those people exist, i just saw that scumbag who ripped off a kid running a drink stand with a fake 100
So I’m going to tell the town that Jack Duck likes to see when blind people straight up get robbed
I think I saw a What Would You Do episode like that. They had a lady go into a bakery either pretending to be blind or they got a blind actress and they had her pay with the wrong dollar bills and had the cashier (also an actor) not correct her and keep the bigger notes to see if any other people at the bakery would speak up. She paid with a 50 when she only needed a 20 and he gave her change as though she'd used the 20. It was really interesting as a staged episode, but sad to think that this happens to people with whatever level of impaired vision. It's sick
Malaysian money has braille and the size of each money value is made different so that the blind people know the value. not only that, the texture of each money is also made different to make it easier for the blind.
Wow you are sooooo special…
our money has braille??
@@aomac_s ye
@@Do-Not-Disturb I... Did not realize that
@@hamizannaruto 🤏
All money should be made accessible imo
Every blind person I’ve met just feels the difference between each bill, and according to my dad, $50 bills smell different
50's and up is where you start smelling the coke.
@@j_lemy ahahaha underrated comment
All my 20s make me so energetic 😳
@@j_lemy lololol!! u just made my morning
and the size, at least in brazil
A local shop owner around here is blind, when people hand him 1 dollar bills and tell him its a 20, they get kicked out. Never underestimate a blind person, they live in the dark, so they see EVERYTHING.
Is this a witchcraft?
Man I support that dude
What if they came and took the thing without paying … i mean no one saw that … appreciate atleast they paid 1 dollar
@@RivkaranGrewal what if they killed him and stole all his cash. At least they paid 1$ so they're better than a total thief and murder right? But they're still an asshole and the blind person can hear them enter. You can probably get away with stealing something but then again he could have someone checking the tapes every day
@@hugo57k91 haha bro i am just joking
Here in Brazil the money has raised print with different textures for each bill, and they're different sizes.
Same thing here in India. Raised prints.
NZ also has this, the US is just backwards.
Most countries do this. They make their money beautiful and costly to make them feel better that the shit usd still worth more
My parents are brazilian so I visit brazil a lot. But here in the US I feel like they don't accommodate for people with disabilities like Brazilians do. I went to brazil with my blind sister, her also blind husband, and their kids. Their kids can see but they are just kids so I'm guiding all of them with all of our luggage. 2 employees came to help me with the carts and the luggage. Got back to the states no help, had to pay for the carts, asked a cop for directions he said ask someone else I'm here to stop bad guys not help you🤡. In brazil a cop went out of his way to help us. Latin countries just have a lot more love for each other.
Yeah but USA is a third world country so you can't blame them.
I’m blind I need this
What did you say? I can’t read your comment because I’m blind too.
@kag427 Wait, how did you know they said they were blind if you're blind too? Cuz you said you can't read it, but you're blind "too"...
Oh btw, I'm also blind and have no clue what either of you said.
I’m gonna send my blind grandad this video
To watch*?
@@luiscamacho1996 yeh
Lmao why does this comment not have any likes
full URL, not a link.
Naaaaa💀
I always remember that scene in “Ray”. As Ray travels on the road, he demands to be paid in single dollar bills so no one can cheat him (since he cannot see the paper notes of the cash). I think cash should already have braille on them when they are made.
100% agree
Canadian bills have braille on them, I think Euros do too
Depends on the country. Some countries have bill size difference. Some do add braille.
Also bills should be different Size
@@hq3473 no
That is interesting because in the UK all our notes have braille already added.
There all different sizes as well
Pretty sure you go to jail here in Australia if you tried to start popping holes in banknotes.. and yes our new notes come built in braille
Ditto Canada! Come on, US, join us in the 21st century!
Literally every currency has braille added. But of course the US wants to be different... "the country of freedom"
Yup comes free with your government issued dueling sword
vending machines must be their worst nightmare
Here in Europe, bills have slightly different sizes so blind people can notice.
Also coins have small indentations on the edges, so they can be easily identified.
OH IS THAT WHY
@@konstant_ly no, the reason coins have edging is because back in the day when coins were made of precious metals people would shave them for flakes of the metal, the ridges ensure you can tell if someone has done this. Now it’s mostly for the blind though
In Poland, bills also have specific geometric shapes that can be felt with fingers
In countries such as the UK, Canada and Australia, they already have Braille on them.
Do you need $1000 PayPal gift card?
I sent my blind friend this link, thank you 🙏
Nice, I told my deaf friend about you!
@@sophiavickers8955lmaof
💀
@@sophiavickers8955i feel you bro
Cant wait until they *see* it
In the UK, paper money already has braille on it and each denomination is in different sizes to assist those who have visual impairments. This is also the same for many other countries.
Where? I just felt a couple of notes and they're both smooth
@@baraitalo along the left edge as you look at the queen's side. its also one of the things to check for security. if your notes (the new plastic ones, paper ones are no longer legal tender) are missing the braille, they are fake
@@MalcolmCooks aaaah i had to go and look it up! the 10s, 20s, 50s, have different patterns of dots in squares, and the 5s haven't. it's not actually braille though. thanks for info i'd never have noticed otherwise!
You have the best username 👍🏼 generally my usual state.
and also different colours too. So even with blurry asf vision you can see which one it is lmao
Your videos always leave me wanting more.
In the UK, each note already has braille and are categorised by size (the smallest note, the £5, is the smallest size going up to £50 which is the largest)
The United States is supposed to be changing the money for the blind. It's long overdue. I am going to buy one of those braille money markers and imprint all of the cash I use. I know it sounds crazy but I always worry about visually impaired people being taken advantage of.
Coins are also easily distinguished and identifiable - diameter, shape, thickness, edge milling.
It's not braille. Each denomination has a different number of clusters of raised dots.
How about the one pound note?
@@simpan197 We dont have a £1 note. stoped beeing used in 1988s an is nolonger legal tender. We use a £1 coin. I think Scotland still has a £1 note but I've never seen one so duno if it has braille on it
I find it strange that a modern nation like the US doesn’t already print braille on their notes as standard instead of expecting a blind person to pay extra for devices to do it themselves
Especially since theres even braile in my local middle school on every door. How do we have the money for that but not the money for money? Honestly this country is broke💀
Blind people do not exist. They’re faking it.
Never let anyone fool you that the US is a modern nation.
We don't have safe drinking water almsot anywhere in the country, even with lower standards than most other modern countries.
Our federally mandated minimum wage is more than 150% below the poverty level (and it is legal for an employer to pay even lower in certain circumstances.)
Our medical care has been in constant decline for the last 10 years or so and has never been more expensive. Most Americans cannot afford healthcare and don't recieve it unless it's a life or death scenario.
Most Americans are in thousands and thousands of debt, despite not being able to afford a home or car payment.
Never let anyone fool you this is a nice place to live. It's all fake Hollywood bullshit.
Yeah they already come with it in the Uk
@@domenik8339 that’s why it’s so strange people risk their lives illegally crossing borders to live here right? They just just go back to their war torn shitholes, it’s better than the US! /s
Before actually processing what he said i thought that little black box was gonna shred the money😅
me too...
😱😱
"This is a short demo of how somebody can tell what bill they have, and then mark it with braille."
"they don't get money."
our indian currency have tactile lines for each note for the blind population, as a child my mom told me about this and it really fascinated me.
In Malaysia, the money was braille ready. I never realised that until one of my friends that are half blind told me how she checked her money balance by feeling the dots on the bill. I'm quite thankful my country really thinks about the disabled people and making their daily life easier
It’s the same in Canada too
India too
It's practically just America that died
Rushed to the comment to look for the Malaysian comment and wasn't disappointed
Polish banknotes (polski złoty) have relief printing on it (shapes like square or circle), but it goes flat with time so...
But for example euro banknotes have different sizes, escalating to value
Fun Fact: Canadian Bills have braille already on them.
Edit: Wow, looking at all the replies it’s like pretty much every country has braille on their bills BUT the United States lmao
Another (of many) reason why Canada is much better than Murica
fun fact: the Canadian president is a wuss who lets his wife peg him
And with Sweden the money is in different size depending on how much it is
Pretty sure the British note does aswell, I use card tho
So do Australian notes
Here in Canada our money is printed with braille already on it 😊
That is why here in Europe, all the bills and coins are of different sizes.
Yh but braille is easier to recognize
Who are you showboating for? Instead of bragging, you should just be grateful we allow your little puppet state to exist.
@@nae_eoneobro they're literally smaller size=smaller amount that's way more recognizable for someone blind, just imagine they don't know braille duh
Sounds socialist. Why should the government waste money on this? 🇺🇸🦅
Keep doing what you're doing, it's working!
I recall a story about a blind man who had a newsstand in an office building. He put people on their honor to tell him how much they paid, and was asked once how much he lost from people misleading him. He said it actually worked the other way, and there were often $5 bills in his singles tray. This was back in a prior century.
*Great to know this wholesome story...*
If only the denominations weren’t all the same size, then he could have made a tray with different size compartments for the denominations.
cant believe they dont already have it this day and age
“This device you can tell what bill you have”
“Money”
Who would’ve thought
20 lol 😂
Hi kiddo
Do you know Bill in this video is considered as money
"No need to thank me."
Twenty*
Nice, it's amazing the stuff technology is doing these days especially for disabled people
New Australian money: I HAVE NO SUCH WEAKNESS
Yes! It's good that old AUD also had different colours and sizes as well. Adding the tactile markers is great!
I've just came back from a trip overseas and I'll never take Australian's colourful notes for granted anymore. The distinct colours of each note makes it so so easy to pull out the right one from the wallet
My favourite part of being Australian is the money; not only did we invent the polymer note, but we basically led innovation in cash security, fraud detection, accessibility, etc.
It's also beautiful and contains a lot of important historical and cultural references.
Yes u monkeys use plastic
@@andregrubert1560 quite an astute observation and pray tell how exactly did you come to this thrilling observation and the purpose there in of pointing it out.
In Canada the "paper" bills (I don't think it's actually paper) just come with braille on them. It's actually a decent way to see if your money is legit because it's hard to fake well
Polymer.
Yes this would be a neat feature to have on US currency and yet another way to curb counterfeiting.
I wonder if it has ever been suggested to the US Treasury Department
Our bills are made of Polymer instead of paper.
How would it be hard to put braille on fake bills?
Same in UK plus different sizes and colours
In Brazil they simple make money diferent sizes.
They are also diferent colors so people that don't know how to read, have bad eye sign or children can identify it better and simple helps everybody.
(I teach this one time to a blind elderly man )
When I was a kid, I lived with a blind person.
He used to fold the money in a special way so that he would know the nomination.
Times have changed.
We gotta start a movement of people marking bills with braille even if they aren’t blind. We gotta help our blind friends in any way possible.
thats not a bad idea. I make a lot of cash tips, maybe Ill start doing it to circulate a lot. It would also force seeing people to consider their blind brethen
I wonder if theres a standardized spot for the braille?
@@evelynphipps610usually near the top left corner of the bill
Australia’s way ahead of you 🫠
As good as an idea that is, machines that use cash insert will need to update. Not to mention replacing the entire populations cash to the new one.
I bought one but i put the wrong numbers on them
That ain’t gonna work when I replace all their bills with peanut butter coupons
peanut butter coupons???💀💀💀
I'll take those coupons thankyou
I mean I guess you’re not wrong
I'm from germany and Euro bills can be distinguished by their size. Our coins have different brail-like markings at the side.
As a blind person I would like to thank you for this video. It was very unsightful
You know, I think I've actually had a bill with braille on it? Cool to know where it came from, and it was once in the hands of someone who needed it.
everyone needs money wtf
@@AdamNisenziSpisak They mean a blind person needed the bill with braille on it. Are you slow?
@@AdamNisenziSpisak lmao
@@heartsforluci4 your mom
@@heartsforluci4 lmfaooo haahhha this had me rollin
I remember going to court years ago for a ticket and stopped in the store that was in the lobby. Much to my surprise, the cashier was blind. He had some device like this that he'd put the bills in and it would tell him the denomination.
There comes a point where you just arent qualified for the job....but then again thats the government for you
@@joshuaanderson7511What job should they get then? Inclusivity and good design helps everyone. If everyone can participate and be a productive member, it benefits all of us
@@XenaAndKineveryone has limits, its ok to accept that
In Europe, the notes are growing bigger the higher the value is.
Real
Not 100% Sure but i think they got Lines on them that you can feel.
in Brazil too...
and they have lines on the side. the number of gaps indicates the value
also has braille-esque feature on the edge so you can feel what you're holding
Finally! I wondered when this would happen, it's wonderful for my two friends who are blind...
I'd be strugglin just to get the bill in the reader if I was blind 💀
Australian bank notes are the most advanced in the world. They are made of polymer plastic, have holograms of wildlife, the extremely fine lines all match up perfectly when rolled into a cigar-like tube, they have clear sections and opaque sections, and ALL are marked with braille to tell their denominations. There are other countries that have similar qualities, but you will find that these notes are made in Australia.
UK notes also have all these.
Polymer plastic.
Holographic that when you shine a laser into it projects an image
Clear space
Braille
Fine intricate patterns.
Images within images.
These are made in the UK. Australia pioneered the technology tho.
Personally i hate the notes cause they stick together when damp or wet and you could end up handing over more money than you intended.
Secondly when they're try they easily blow away or slip out of your pocket.
No it's craps
Ps I am from Canada and got the same exact polymer crap
RomaniaAlso.
Bro you need to come out of your island more even Mexico has had the haptic, color blind, varying length bills since 2006.
@@thedailyruns6046 Modern polymer banknotes were first developed by the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation or CSIRO and first issued as currency in Australia during 1988, 18 years before Mexico. Australia developed the concept, and so were certainly the first. We produce notes for other countries. If you use this technology, your country purchased the ability to do so from Australia. Please don't tell me to come out of my island. It's a bloody CONTINENT mate.
I gotta show my blind friend this
😂dude
Show your blind friends this video...
but how are they gonna see it
Bro is menace to blind people society 💀
I SEE what you did there
Your friend has already seen it.
My blind Uncle use to fold his bills different ways to know. That was in the 60s.
I find it weird that money in the US does not have this by default. Here in SA, all our bank notes have a piece that feels different for each type. It is for elderly people who can't see very well and don't want to give a R200 instead of a R20.
They still make their notes out of paper so it would ruin notes if they did.
What is SA?
@@jarhead3571 South Africa. Our bank notes have little ridges on the paper.
Here In america you can scratch the shirts of the presidents for texture and each presidents shirt is a different size so they can tell what amount they have without needing this
Whatchu talking about, everyone knows SA doesn't have any money 😂
I’m sure here in the uk the notes are all different sizes so the blind know the difference , I’m going to check now in case I’m wrong 😂
Yo did you check?
It does but it’s hard to tell the difference between certain notes (£10vs£5) I’m pretty sure it has braille though? Lemme check 😂
Edit: Yh we have braille for notes £10 and above. Not £5 though.
They have braile on the NEW polymer notes, but it didnt exist before those on paper ones
They have tactile features on the new polymer notes.
Nothing on the £5
4 dots in a square on the £10
2x 4 dot squares on the £20
Not actually seen a new £50 since nobody uses them so I don't know
the picture on the usda is raised so is the amount
Currency should already have braille on it. ✨️
Banknotes in Scotland already have braille. They are also different sizes, different bright colours and the numbers are large. How is this not a thing in USA?
In Europe we just have bills of all different sizes and feelable patterns on it so you can feel the difference. I'm not blind or whatsoever but even I don't have to look at the bill to know what value it has.
Europe is just different and superior in so many ways 😁
I'm from Brazil. The bills here have different sizes and marks. The minimum size difference is enough to blind people to differentiate each bill value. For not blind person is harder because we don't have so much touch skills as blind people because we see the values anyway.
The bad side of marks and braile is that with time as bills are in use many times, the paper loses those marks.
All our bills have that feature here in Canada 🇨🇦
You're so cool. You probably have universal health care too.
@@yesteryeargears8191 good healthcare not good MENTAL healthcare
@@celestewithgun8898 🥲 it's always something
It's kinda standard for OECD nations, pretty sure the Brits have it too. The US just uses old, flimsy notes.
Really???
British notes have Braille already printed, it also helps to spot fakes
Here in Brazil each bill has a different size so they can be easily identified by blind people
Sounds annoying
@@-Scrapper- how would it be annoying?
@@lucasf1674 different sized notes in your wallet?
@@-Scrapper- € are also different sized
@@IOSFREAKS1234 not really. It's barely noticeable so it's pretty much non existent. Is it the same in brazil
A lot of countries just have braille pressed into their banknotes by default so you don't need a device.
A lot of countries also believe Healthcare amd women's rights isn't optional.
@@SatanRomps YOU'RE SPITTIN' facts dawg
@@SatanRomps In the USA healthcare, college, and women's bodily autonomy are considered satanic marxism.
@@SatanRomps like the US, proving a point you didn’t want to prove lol
Canadien money comes with brail. And it has English and French languages on it, as well as pictures of individual people from history for each bill. And also every bill has its own colour so we can tell what it is a mile away. $5=blue $10=purple $20=green $50=red $100=light brown It’s also waterproof. And if you hold a bill up to the light and look through the clear part, you’ll see $ flouting around whatever light source you look at.
And this is why Canada beats the United States, simply the care they have for everyone lol
In Nepal, our notes have brail markings, and the size and colour of currency are different to help with vision issues
As a blind person, seeing this made me very happy
Wait……
You seen what now? 📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸📸
In Poland we have different symbols for the bills, square for 10, circle for 20, diamond for 50, cross for 100, triangle for 200 and 8 small boxes for 500 polish złoty. (500 PLN is different due to relative recent design as it was introduced in 2017). Also size of the banknote is different depending on the value, higher value = bigger size
Wait, are they bills or coins though???
@@CMC369 you can have the bank notes be all different sizes of rectangle, that's what we do in the UK too. The coins are also different sizes and shapes
In the UK the newer polymer notes have Braille already stamped onto them… pretty neat
For the blind people?
@@jasonknapp3100 No because Braille makes the money more valuable...
@@GinkgoPete thanks for the precision
They were always different sizes as well. In the US the money is all the exact same size, which also makes counterfeiting way easier.
So did the paper notes
In normal countries. Bills have different sizes and marks for blind people in order to feel the value of the bill.
If u ask me the government should already be doing this. If we're gonna preach inclusivity then let's be inclusive.
Right they ignore all the actual people who need included bc things outside of their control but cater to the mentally I'll and morally depraved smh
@@comosaycomosah It’s a bit messed up that you think mental illness is something that is within people’s control. People with mental illnesses deserve support and inclusion just as much as people with visible disabilities.
@@fabplays6559 oh no I dont mean people who have actual issues....I obviously mean guys who dress as girls, pedophiles, and the like
They already do that. Feel the texture near the president head.
In india we have brail on all bank notes and almost outside every gov sign
In Australia all our notes are not only slightly different sizes but already have Braille incorporated into them.
Thats pretty neat
It's not Braille. It's just different dots for different notes. If you could read braille then the notes wouldn't mean anything.
Just makes it easier for blind people.
They also have different colours making them stand out more.
Same in the UK
in australia you also have beasts living in your back door so stfu
I never thought about something that simple for blind people. I almost went blind once. I thank my lucky stars that I can see.
There is still time to go blind
@@MrMortyBaby the way it happened to me wasn't exactly peaceful so I'd rather not have a second go at it lol. Involved a car and around 1lb of glass in and behind my eyes.
@@WyattMcFeelz Final Destination
@@MrMortyBaby This is such an ominous statement
@@MrMortyBaby then take your time
I saw a video from a Canadian blind girl who showed their bills are marked in Braille. She also explained that since most visually impaired people actually can't read Braille, they use a "full block" system so each block of dots means a different bill (one block is $5, two blocks is $10, etc.)
Thank you cause people be stealing from blind people all the time and expect no karma this could really help god out ❤
Our money has printer's marks (not braille), you can feel the streaks or dots without destroying it.
This would be considered defacing in Australia and carries a legal penalty if caught in the act or admitting to doing it.
@@charliepearce8767it does here too
In India currency notes have different sizes and colours so that the illiterate can tell them apart. Also, the newly printed notes are coded for the blind to feel and know the value.
Oh I see, interesting technology gadget, everyone should take a look to it and support it. I've watched this vid like 5 times 😮
Ohhh so that’s why some dollar bills I’ve got have little dots on them. Very informative!
I've never seen this and my mom's husband was blind
@SpicyBean Tofu Really? That’s interesting
In India, the notes are already engraved with line markings
What line markings?
@@Void-Null-Panda The line markings on the side of the note
needle marks when they use needles to tie the notes together...
@@arilemmke5166whaa?
In India we have some features on each note where a blind person can know what denomination the note is with touch.
Its becoming a worldwide thing almost every country now as it like everything else the us is behind the rest
1970, a blind man named Howard had a small candy, sodas & snack store -- he had no problem.