Yes, I'm blind. So what? I love
listening to music, cooking, trying new,
unusual things. I flew a plane last
weekend, like an actual real plane.
That's not a joke. Hi, my name is
Santiago. Everything that I always
wanted to do, I have always given it a
go. And now I'm a blind electrical
engineer. And I am an ambassador for
International Day of People with
Disability 2025.
My big question is for somebody with
your disability, how has the technology
revolution been, good or bad? I run a
company called Halo and I started it
because I was frustrated by buses
leaving me behind. If I fix that or if I
fix the problem of being dropped off at
the incorrect stop in a way that
benefits me but benefits everybody else,
we can improve public transport for
everybody.
For me personally, I think Siri Alexa is
fantastic for light switches and things.
I can turn lights on with it.
Technology is good because it helps us
to travel, to use transport.
The creative solutions that tech or tech
companies are coming up with, I think a
lot of them are coming from people with
disabilities. when the people who need
it the most are either developing it or
right there from the from the beginning.
Technology is brilliant. But it's when
people that are designing it have no
lived experience. Get into this mindset
of technology is going to fix my life
that we get into trouble. The more we
can break down the perception that
people with disabilities need to be
fixed, the more we can move forward as a
society. Everybody has to play an equal
part or getting rid of this idea that we
are a burden. I'm not a secondass
citizen and I'll be damned if somebody's
going to tell me otherwise. Yes, I'm
blind, but some people are tall, some
people are short, some people are
different ethnicities. We're just
another mix in this massive pot we call
the world.
Santiago utilises his lived experience and degree in electrical engineering to invent solutions to make the world more accessible. As a UN panellist, Churchill Fellow and TedX speaker, he is determined to change the way the world perceives people with disability.