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Blind runner to attempt Brighton Marathon with AI glasses
Summary
Clarke Reynolds will run the Brighton Marathon guided by remote volunteers using Ray‑Ban Meta AI glasses connected to the Be My Eyes app; he is running in support of the Fight for Sight charity.
Content
Clarke Reynolds, known as Mr Dot, plans to run the Brighton Marathon while guided by remote volunteers using Ray‑Ban Meta AI glasses linked to the Be My Eyes app. The app usually connects people with sight loss to volunteers for everyday tasks, but Reynolds intends to use it along a full marathon course. He is running to support the Fight for Sight charity and to challenge public perceptions of blindness. Reynolds has the inherited condition Retinitis Pigmentosa and describes his vision as seeing shadows and shapes.
Key details:
- Clarke Reynolds (Mr Dot), 45, will run the 26.2-mile Brighton Marathon.
- He will use Ray‑Ban Meta AI glasses connected to the Be My Eyes app so volunteers can see his view and offer guidance by voice.
- Reynolds has Retinitis Pigmentosa and describes his vision as like looking underwater, seeing shadows and shapes.
- He is running in support of the Fight for Sight charity and serves as an ambassador.
- More than 100 volunteers have helped in his training; his first helper was from Virginia and others include people in Scotland, Thailand and Canada.
Summary:
Reynolds aims to demonstrate how assistive technology and remote volunteers can be applied beyond routine tasks to support an endurance event, and he hopes the effort will challenge stigma around sight loss. Undetermined at this time.
