Path Guide: Microsoft’s Research Project That Helps People Navigate Indoors
Description

When blind people navigate, they can use various technologies that can guide them to their destination. While walking outdoors, their smartphone’s GPS can give them step by step directions. For indoors, there are some places that use Bluetooth beacons to provide step by step directions to help a blind person reach from point A to point B. Having said that, GPS apps don’t get any coverage inside buildings, and thus don’t work. So using the phone’s map inside is not a possibility. When it comes to Bluetooth beacons, there are very few buildings that have them.

We know how difficult it can be to navigate massive shopping malls, big buildings and offices, especially if it’s our first time there. Where’s the conference room in our new office? Where’s the coffee shop in the new mall that your friends want to meet you at? To help people navigate insidea building, Microsoft has been working on a low tech app that can guide people to their indoor destinations with step by step directions . The app, called Path Guide, kind of implements the “follow the leader” concept. It relies on one person taking charge to find the destination. As that person walks towards their destination, Path Guide uses their smartphone sensors to trace and record their steps. Once that person reaches their destination, they upload the directions to the cloud. Other people can now access and follow those directions through the app, and get to the same place without getting lost or asking a million people for directions. It also allows annotations during trace recording – people could add text, audio, and photos along the path, to provide more information to others.

As more people record and upload their directions, Path Guide can combine different paths and make the system even more useful. Also, by looking at all the uploaded paths, it would be easy to determine which path is the most popular, and can be recommended to users. This will increase the navigation experience for everyone.

Although this app is meant for everyone, it can be especially beneficial for people with visual impairment in places they have never visited before. Whether it’s a conference room in a new office building, a hall inside a university building, skyscrapers, or even specific aisles in big box stores – navigating to specific spots indoors can potentially become a breeze.

Path Guide, which is still in progress, is a research project, and may be a little rough around the edges sometimes. Microsoft hopes that you will use it, and provide feedback to the team that’s working on it.

For now, Path Guide is available only on Android, and can be downloaded directly from here.

Watch the video below to see Path Guide in action.

Image gallery:

Path Guide home screen. The option "Trace Recording" is selected. Screen shows trace being recorded. It has an image of the indoor place this person is in, and also shows that 123 steps have been taken, 3 turns, and 1 level. Screen shows directions for someone wanting to reach a specific spot. It displays instructions "keep walking for < 10 steps and then turn right Screen shows summary of directions including annotations.

Source: Microsoft via Fast Company

Website: Path Guide

The post Path Guide: Microsoft’s Research Project That Helps People Navigate Indoors appeared first on Assistive Technology Blog.

Comments
Order by: 
Per page:
 
  • There are no comments yet
Related Feed Entries
In a landmark move for the global assistive technology community, the Ministry of Electronics & IT recently unveiled a comprehensive strategy to transform India from a text-heavy digital landscape into a voice-first ecosystem. Launched at the India AI Summit Expo 2026, this initiative is anchore…
6 days ago · From Assistive Technology Blog
By Sam Blanco, PhD, LBA, BCBA There’s a famous quote from W. Edwards Deming that says “Without data, you’re just another person with an opinion.” While Deming wasn’t a behavior analyst, this statement aligns closely with how BCBAs approach their work. Most BCBAs will report how much they love …
6 days ago · From Different Roads to Learning
Adidas has announced the launch of the Supernova Rise 3 Adaptive, its first performance running shoe specifically designed for athletes with disabilities. Developed over several years, the shoe was inspired by Chris Nikic—the first person with Down syndrome to complete an Ironman—who previously stru…
10.04.2026 · From Assistive Technology Blog
 Dear Friends, I never write for our blogs but I wanted to share this glimmer of hope. This weekend, an acquaintance of a friend of a friend asked me to view a French film called “No Filter Café” at a Socially Relevant Film Festival in NYC.  It’s a film in French about 5 young men…
31.03.2026 · From Different Roads to Learning
With the April 24, 2026, deadline for the updated ADA Title II regulations rapidly approaching, the landscape of digital inclusion is shifting from reactive accommodation to proactive accessibility. This mandate requires large public institutions to ensure that every facet of their digital presence—…
28.03.2026 · From Assistive Technology Blog
Rate
0 votes
Info
20.07.2017 (20.07.2017)
483 Views
0 Subscribers
Recommend
Tags