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		<title>Engineering Accessibility and IndependenceHumanWare</title>
		<link>https://manufacturinginfocus.com/2026/04/humanware/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Vicki Damon]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2026 19:04:31 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[April 2026]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Solutions Technology]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://manufacturinginfocus.com/?p=39112</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>In Drummondville, Quebec, a manufacturing operation is quietly reshaping what accessibility means for people who are blind or visually impaired—from braille devices and tactile displays to wearable smart technologies and magnification solutions. By any measure, HumanWare is a company built not just on technology, but on empathy. Founded in 1988 as a small startup in [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com/2026/04/humanware/">Engineering Accessibility and Independence&lt;p class=&quot;company&quot;&gt;HumanWare&lt;/p&gt;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com">Manufacturing In Focus</a>.</p>
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<p><em>In Drummondville, Quebec, a manufacturing operation is quietly reshaping what accessibility means for people who are blind or visually impaired—from braille devices and tactile displays to wearable smart technologies and magnification solutions.</em></p>



<p>By any measure, <a href="https://www.humanware.com/en-usa/" type="link" id="https://www.humanware.com/en-usa/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">HumanWare</a> is a company built not just on technology, but on empathy. Founded in 1988 as a small startup in Quebec, HumanWare began with a bold and deeply human mission: to create independence and accessibility for people who are blind or have low vision. Nearly four decades later, that mission continues to guide every product decision and manufacturing process, now on a global scale.</p>



<p>From its headquarters and production facility in Drummondville, Quebec, to research and development teams in the Montreal area, sales teams across the United States, offices in the United Kingdom, and partnerships spanning Europe, Australia, and beyond, HumanWare has grown into a global leader in assistive technology. Yet, despite its expansion and its integration into the EssilorLuxottica group, the company remains deeply rooted in the same values that shaped its earliest days: innovation, agility, quality, and above all, human impact.</p>



<p><strong><em>Addressing real-world needs</em></strong><br>“Everything we do is centered around independence and accessibility,” says Marc Jiona, Senior Director of Operations at HumanWare. “Our products are not conveniences; they are lifelines. People rely on them every day to work, study, navigate their environment, and live independently. That responsibility shapes everything we do.”</p>



<p>From its inception, HumanWare has focused on addressing the real-world challenges faced by individuals with visual impairments and sight loss. In its early years, this mission required developing solutions from the ground up, often before the necessary technology even existed. Nearly every component of a HumanWare product—tools, platforms, hardware, and software—had to be created in-house, demanding exceptional creativity and resourcefulness from the team to design, prototype, and deliver functional, reliable solutions.</p>



<p>That pioneering spirit remains central to the company’s DNA. While HumanWare now benefits from the resources and global reach of EssilorLuxottica, its leadership team works deliberately to preserve the agility and innovation of its startup roots.</p>



<p>“Our challenge today is to maintain that speed and flexibility,” says Jiona. “We want to keep moving fast, responding quickly to needs, and staying deeply connected to our users.”</p>



<p>This connection is more than philosophical. Roughly nine to ten percent of HumanWare’s global workforce lives with a visual impairment, including product testers and customer service representatives. Their lived experience ensures that products are not merely functional, but intuitive and practical. “They help us build better,” says Myriam Champagne, Director of Marketing. “They understand firsthand what works, what doesn’t, and what could make daily life easier.”</p>



<p><strong><em>A different way of doing business</em></strong><br>HumanWare’s Drummondville facility is where ideas become reality. Home to approximately 40 employees, the site houses production, quality control, technical support, and repair operations. Additional R&amp;D teams in the Montreal area expand the company’s engineering capacity, bringing the total Quebec workforce to nearly 75. Globally, HumanWare employs approximately 150 people, supported by regional teams in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and Europe.</p>



<p>What sets the manufacturing operation apart is not just technical excellence, but emotional investment. “Every single device that leaves this building will change someone’s life,” says Jiona. “That creates pride. People here know they’re doing something meaningful,” and this sense of purpose drives exceptional attention to detail. The company’s products undergo extensive durability testing, including extreme temperature exposure and drop tests designed to reflect real-world conditions.</p>



<p>Even the materials are thoughtfully chosen, combining durability with easy cleanability to ensure both hygiene and lasting performance. Designs are optimized for everyday use across a wide range of environments and conditions around the world, ensuring reliability wherever the device is used. Some video magnifier models experience return rates as low as two percent, an extraordinary figure in consumer electronics, particularly in a category where products endure heavy daily use.</p>



<p><strong><em>Emerging innovation</em></strong><br>Among HumanWare’s most revolutionary products is the tactile and multi-line braille tablet, <a href="https://store.humanware.com/hus/monarch-the-1st-dynamic-tactile-and-multi-line-braille-tablet.html" type="link" id="https://store.humanware.com/hus/monarch-the-1st-dynamic-tactile-and-multi-line-braille-tablet.html" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Monarch</a>, a device that has fundamentally transformed access to education, information, and professional opportunity for blind individuals.</p>



<p>Named one of <a href="https://www.humanware.com/en-international/news/company-news/time-best-inventions-2025-monarch/" type="link" id="https://www.humanware.com/en-international/news/company-news/time-best-inventions-2025-monarch/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">TIME Magazine’s Best Inventions of 2025</a>, the Monarch is the world’s first multi-line tactile display capable of rendering both text and graphics in real time. “It’s like an iPad for someone who is blind—but with the ability to dynamically render tactile text and graphics in real time,” says Jiona. For blind students, this represents a monumental leap forward.</p>



<p>In traditional learning environments, braille textbooks can be on average ten times thicker than standard books. Locating chapters and navigating complex subjects becomes an enormous logistical burden. “The Monarch removes that barrier,” says Champagne. “Now students can scroll through digital textbooks, read equations, feel graphs, and explore maps, all in one device.”</p>



<p>The implications are enormous. Mathematics, geography, physics, and data-driven disciplines suddenly become far more accessible, and students no longer face delays waiting for specialized embossed materials. Learning becomes immediate and interactive.</p>



<p>The Monarch’s impact has been especially profound in educational settings, supported by HumanWare’s partnership with the American Printing House for the Blind (APH). Through government funding programs in the United States, eligible students can receive advanced assistive technology, ensuring that financial limitations do not restrict access.</p>



<p>One such student, Emma Olech, who is homeschooled, describes the impact: “I think the most beneficial part of using the Monarch is being able to easily access the tactile graphics… it is much easier than flipping through unwieldy hardcopy books.” These experiences reaffirm why HumanWare continues to invest heavily in innovation, even when product development timelines stretch over years.</p>



<p><em><strong>Support at every step</strong></em><br>The company’s value proposition extends well beyond hardware development, encompassing a fully integrated support ecosystem designed to optimize user performance and long-term reliability. Each product launch is supported by comprehensive technical documentation engineered for compatibility with screen-reader technologies, detailed audio-based instruction systems, and structured video-based tutorials, including guided installation and setup protocols.</p>



<p>These resources are reinforced by direct access to trained customer service specialists who provide real-time troubleshooting and product guidance. In parallel, HumanWare deploys dedicated field trainers to educational institutions and partner organizations to deliver hands-on demonstrations, structured onboarding, and in-situ technical support, ensuring effective deployment across diverse user environments.</p>



<p>“We want people to feel supported at every step,” says Champagne. “From the moment they open the box, they should feel confident.”</p>



<p>Of course, customer service is another pillar of the company’s philosophy. Unlike some technology companies that rely heavily on automated systems, HumanWare ensures that customers speak directly to trained professionals, many of whom are visually impaired themselves. “When someone calls, they talk to a real person,” says Jiona. “And often that person understands their challenges personally.” This approach fosters trust and a deep sense of partnership between HumanWare and its users.</p>



<p><strong><em>A commitment to quality</em></strong><br>Underlying every HumanWare product is a rigorously structured and continuously audited quality management system designed to meet the highest international standards. The company operates under ISO 9001:2015 certification and complies fully with the stringent requirements of the European Medical Device Regulations (MDR), ensuring consistent product quality and regulatory compliance across global markets. And in parallel, HumanWare’s designation as a Certified B Corporation reflects its commitment to responsible business practices, encompassing environmental stewardship, ethical governance, workforce wellbeing, and social impact. This commitment has also been recognized externally, most notably through its inclusion in the <a href="https://www.humanware.com/en-usa/news/company-news/recognition-humanware-accessibility-forbes" type="link" id="https://www.humanware.com/en-usa/news/company-news/recognition-humanware-accessibility-forbes" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Forbes Accessibility</a> 100 in Spring 2025, highlighting the company’s leadership in advancing inclusive innovation.</p>



<p>Collectively, these certifications and recognitions underscore not only HumanWare’s engineering and manufacturing excellence, but also its broader responsibility to operate with integrity across its entire value chain. The company’s B Corp certification underscores its commitment to balancing profit with purpose, ensuring positive outcomes for employees, customers, communities, and the planet.</p>



<p>In addition to its collaboration with the American Printing House for the Blind (APH), the company works closely with organizations such as the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB), the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB) in the United Kingdom, Vision Australia, ONCE in Spain, and multiple United Nations–supported accessibility initiatives. These partnerships serve as continuous feedback channels, enabling HumanWare to refine product functionality, anticipate emerging user requirements, and validate new technological concepts through real-world application. “These organizations give us invaluable feedback,” says Champagne. “They help us refine products and validate new ideas.”</p>



<p>This structured global feedback loop ensures that HumanWare’s solutions are informed by educational and operational environments, resulting in technologies that are both globally scalable and locally relevant.</p>



<p>For HumanWare, three principles guide manufacturing and operations: quality, availability, and cost. Quality remains paramount, as any failure could disrupt a person’s independence, safety, or livelihood. Availability ensures that devices reach users when they need them, even during unexpected demand surges. Cost, meanwhile, remains an ongoing challenge in a niche market. With relatively low production volumes compared to consumer electronics, maintaining affordability requires continuous optimization without sacrificing quality. “We work extremely hard to keep costs as low as possible,” says Jiona. “Accessibility must include affordability.”</p>



<p>As wearable technology and artificial intelligence continue to advance, HumanWare is positioning itself at the forefront of the next generation of accessibility solutions. Through its integration with EssilorLuxottica, the company collaborates closely with teams developing smart eyewear, including Ray-Ban <a href="https://store.humanware.com/hus/smart-glasses" type="link" id="https://store.humanware.com/hus/smart-glasses" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Meta glasses</a>, to explore new ways to combine hardware, AI, audio, and spatial awareness into seamless assistive tools.</p>



<p>And beyond education and employment, HumanWare devices also dramatically improve daily living for individuals with age-related vision loss. One veteran in the United Kingdom, living with wet age-related macular degeneration (AMD) while awaiting cataract surgery, described his experience using HumanWare’s Explore 12 video magnifier:</p>



<p>“As a wet AMD patient awaiting cataract surgery, optical magnifiers were of little use to me. However, after trying the Explore 12, I was amazed at what I could read compared to prescription glasses alone. The white-on-black feature is my favourite because it soothes the effects of my photophobia, and I love the device’s ease of use and portability. It makes my life 1000 times better.”</p>



<p>For many users, HumanWare technology restores confidence and independence, allowing them to continue living at home, working, and engaging socially. Rather than offering a single solution, HumanWare envisions a modular ecosystem: portable magnifiers, tactile displays, wearable navigation aids, AI-powered reading tools, and smart glasses that work together. “There is no one-size-fits-all,” explains Champagne. “People want options. They want technology that adapts to their lifestyle.”</p>



<p><strong><em>Powered by purpose</em></strong><br>Ask HumanWare employees what motivates them, and a common theme emerges: purpose. “The mission is powerful,” says Jiona. “It gives meaning to everything we do.” From engineers and assemblers to marketers and service technicians, the team understands that their work has real-world consequences, and this shared sense of impact creates deep loyalty and pride.</p>



<p>“It’s not just manufacturing,” Champagne adds. “It’s about leveling the playing field, from early childhood education to career development and aging with independence.”</p>



<p>In an evolving technological landscape, HumanWare remains firmly focused on human-centered innovation. Artificial intelligence, smart wearables, real-time tactile displays, and multi-sensory interfaces will increasingly converge, opening new possibilities for accessibility. Yet, amid this rapid change, HumanWare remains grounded in a simple philosophy: “Technology should serve humanity,” says Champagne. “Not the other way around.”</p>



<p>From a small Quebec startup to a global leader in accessibility innovation, HumanWare continues to redefine what inclusive manufacturing can achieve, proving that when engineering meets empathy, extraordinary things happen.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com/2026/04/humanware/">Engineering Accessibility and Independence&lt;p class=&quot;company&quot;&gt;HumanWare&lt;/p&gt;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com">Manufacturing In Focus</a>.</p>
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		<title>Supporting OEMs from Design to ProductionStronix</title>
		<link>https://manufacturinginfocus.com/2026/04/stronix/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Vicki Damon]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Apr 2026 19:03:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[April 2026]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Solutions Technology]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://manufacturinginfocus.com/?p=39163</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>In industries where machinery operates under extreme conditions, reliability and performance are not optional, they are essential. From mining operations to forestry equipment and power generation systems, the machines powering these sectors must withstand demanding environments while meeting evolving regulatory and safety expectations. Stronix positions itself at the intersection of engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com/2026/04/stronix/">Supporting OEMs from Design to Production&lt;p class=&quot;company&quot;&gt;Stronix&lt;/p&gt;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com">Manufacturing In Focus</a>.</p>
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<p>In industries where machinery operates under extreme conditions, reliability and performance are not optional, they are essential. From mining operations to forestry equipment and power generation systems, the machines powering these sectors must withstand demanding environments while meeting evolving regulatory and safety expectations.</p>



<p><a href="https://stronix.com/" type="link" id="https://stronix.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener">Stronix</a> positions itself at the intersection of engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain support to help original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) meet those demands. The company works with equipment manufacturers from the earliest design stages through prototyping and production, delivering engineered components that improve performance, safety, and compliance.</p>



<p>With roots in the mining sector and a growing focus on broader heavy-duty markets, Stronix brings a collaborative approach to product development. Its team works closely with OEM partners to solve engineering challenges while providing the manufacturing capabilities required to turn concepts into production-ready components.</p>



<p>Mining environments demand durable equipment capable of operating under exposure to extreme temperatures and challenging terrain. Over time, the team behind Stronix develops specialized knowledge in designing components that meet those requirements.</p>



<p>That expertise forms the foundation for the company’s current business model. Rather than focusing exclusively on mining operations, Stronix works directly with OEMs that manufacture heavy-duty machinery across several industries.</p>



<p>“We realized that the solutions we provide can benefit more than mining,” Aleeya Laureola, Marketing Manager at Stronix, explains. “If we work with the companies that actually manufacture the machines and help them enhance their products, it improves the industry overall.”</p>



<p>Today, Stronix partners with OEMs producing equipment used in mining, forestry, agriculture, and power generation, industries where durability and operational reliability remain critical.</p>



<p>One of the primary advantages Stronix offers its clients is the ability to address multiple engineering challenges through a single partner. In many cases, OEM engineering teams must coordinate with several different suppliers to redesign or improve components such as exhaust systems or thermal insulation blankets, and that process can add complexity and slow product development timelines.</p>



<p>Instead of working with multiple vendors, an OEM can collaborate directly with Stronix to address several design requirements simultaneously. From there, the company works alongside the OEM to develop an integrated solution. That collaboration often begins long before physical prototypes are built.</p>



<p>Stronix engineers frequently engage with customers during the early design phase, reviewing concepts and refining designs through detailed discussions and simulations. By addressing potential challenges early, Stronix helps OEM partners shorten their development cycles while minimizing costly revisions later in the process.</p>



<p>The company’s production environment reflects the customized nature of its work. Unlike facilities dedicated to high-volume manufacturing of identical parts, Stronix operates in a high-mix environment where many components are tailored to specific applications.</p>



<p>A typical project begins with a detailed understanding of the customer’s needs and operating conditions. From there, engineers develop designs and production teams prepare specialized tooling, such as jigs, to ensure consistent fabrication and assembly. The manufacturing floor includes several specialized workstations supporting key processes such as fabrication, welding, thermal blanket production, and product testing.</p>



<p>Throughout production, communication with the client remains a central part of the workflow. “We test, we update them at every stage, and we show them how the component looks as it moves through fabrication,” Laureola explains. “That way they are involved throughout the process rather than only seeing the final product.” This approach allows feedback to be incorporated in real time, helping to reduce delays and improving the overall efficiency of product development.</p>



<p>In heavy-duty applications, component failure can have serious consequences for both safety and productivity, and as a result, quality assurance remains a critical part of Stronix’s manufacturing philosophy. According to Laureola, quality begins with ensuring that the engineering and production teams fully understand the purpose behind each design. “Quality starts with understanding the ‘why’ behind what we are doing,” she says.</p>



<p>Many members of the Stronix team bring firsthand experience working in heavy-duty environments, and that practical perspective informs the design and manufacturing process. When engineers and technicians understand the conditions a component will face in the field, they are better positioned to identify potential improvements during production.</p>



<p>Automation also plays an important role in maintaining consistency, and Stronix incorporates robotic welding where possible to ensure reliable weld quality across components. The company also conducts pressure testing to verify the integrity of exhaust systems and other assemblies. Before a product leaves the facility, detailed inspections, including photographic documentation, confirm that it meets both internal quality standards and customer expectations.</p>



<p>Stronix works with OEMs throughout the entire lifecycle of product development. That process typically begins with collaborative engineering discussions, followed by design refinement and prototype development. Once a prototype is approved, the company can support low-volume production runs before scaling manufacturing to meet broader demand.</p>



<p>Low minimum order quantities (MOQs) are an important part of this process. Many manufacturers require customers to commit to large production orders even during early testing phases, but Stronix takes a more flexible approach that allows OEM partners to validate designs before committing to full-scale manufacturing. “We are happy to work with OEMs to test prototypes in the field before moving to larger volumes,” Laureola says. This flexibility helps customers refine designs based on real-world performance while minimizing financial risk.</p>



<p>While Stronix built its early expertise in the mining sector, the company now sees significant opportunity in other heavy-duty industries, with forestry and power generation representing key areas of growth. Each of these sectors relies on machinery that must perform reliably under demanding conditions, making them natural extensions of the company’s engineering capabilities.</p>



<p>One area where Stronix hopes to expand awareness is sound attenuation. In regions such as Australia, noise regulation already plays an important role in mining operations, particularly when sites operate near residential communities. Through its experience in those markets, Stronix can develop solutions that reduce machine noise while maintaining performance.</p>



<p>Although noise regulation is less prominent in North America, Laureola believes the issue deserves greater attention. “Noise fatigue is real,” she says. “Reducing noise improves safety and communication among workers.” By introducing these solutions to North American OEMs, Stronix hopes to encourage manufacturers to address noise reduction proactively rather than waiting for regulatory requirements.</p>



<p>Of course, environmental regulations also continue to shape the design of heavy-duty equipment, and to this end, Stronix specializes in exhaust systems and after-treatment technologies that help OEMs meet increasingly stringent emissions standards. For instance, modern machinery must comply with standards such as Tier 4 and Stage V emissions requirements. However, many manufacturers still operate or maintain equipment originally designed under earlier regulatory frameworks. The company helps bridge that gap by integrating updated emission systems into existing designs. “We can work with existing machinery drawings and incorporate modern after-treatment systems,” Laureola explains. By upgrading older equipment designs rather than replacing them entirely, manufacturers can extend the lifespan of existing product lines while meeting current environmental standards.</p>



<p>In addition to custom engineering work, Stronix also provides contract manufacturing services for OEM customers. If a manufacturer encounters supply chain disruptions or production delays with existing suppliers, Stronix can step in to produce components based on the customer’s drawings. This flexibility allows OEMs to maintain production schedules even when unexpected challenges arise.</p>



<p>The company also offers consignment stocking arrangements that allow Stronix to hold inventory on behalf of customers. These arrangements help OEMs manage space limitations and respond quickly to fluctuations in demand. “As a diversified supplier, we can help customers reduce risk by being another reliable option,” Laureola says.</p>



<p>Two areas where Stronix especially stands out are metal fabrication for exhaust systems and the design of thermal protection solutions. The company produces large-diameter exhaust pipes and complex metal components used in heavy-duty equipment. These systems often require intricate engineering to maintain airflow efficiency while accommodating the physical constraints of the machinery. In some cases, redesigning an exhaust system involves repositioning the entire assembly.</p>



<p>In addition to metal fabrication, Stronix manufactures thermal covers and engine wraps designed to manage heat within heavy-duty equipment. These thermal blankets help protect surrounding components, reduce fire risk, and prevent burns for operators and maintenance personnel. By tailoring materials and designs to specific machines, Stronix can ensure the thermal protection systems perform reliably under demanding operating conditions.</p>



<p>For all the technical complexity of its work, Stronix emphasizes the importance of relationships. Working closely with OEM engineers, product managers, and production teams helps build trust and ensure that solutions align with real-world operational needs, a collaborative mindset that proves particularly valuable in industries where equipment designs are complex and highly specialized.</p>



<p>Stronix’s internal culture also reflects the collaborative approach the team brings to customer relationships. The company operates around four core values: responsiveness, ensuring customers receive timely support throughout the development process; quality first, maintaining strict standards for design and manufacturing; drive, pushing the organization to continuously improve its capabilities; and transparency, helping build trust with customers and partners. Together, these principles guide both day-to-day operations and long-term strategy.</p>



<p>As the heavy-duty equipment industry evolves, manufacturers face increasing pressure to balance performance, safety, and environmental responsibility, and Stronix aims to support that transition by continuing to invest in engineering expertise and automation technologies that enhance responsiveness and scalability. Moving forward, the company also plans to strengthen its presence across industries where durable equipment and custom engineering solutions are essential.</p>



<p>For Laureola, the opportunity lies in helping OEM partners tackle complex challenges while delivering practical solutions that perform reliably in the field. “We are not focused on building parts in massive volume,” she says. “Our focus is on supporting complex applications where customization, durability, and engineering input really matter.”</p>



<p>By combining robust technical knowledge with collaborative development and flexible manufacturing, Stronix continues to position itself as a strategic partner for OEMs navigating the demanding world of heavy-duty machinery.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com/2026/04/stronix/">Supporting OEMs from Design to Production&lt;p class=&quot;company&quot;&gt;Stronix&lt;/p&gt;</a> appeared first on <a href="https://manufacturinginfocus.com">Manufacturing In Focus</a>.</p>
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