The Simple PTT Lucid: A Push-to-Talk Radio Built with the Blind Community in Mind

For years, push-to-talk over cellular (POC) radios have offered something remarkable: the reach of a nationwide radio network, without the limitations of traditional two-way radio. Whether you are coordinating a volunteer emergency response, connecting with fellow hobbyists across the country, or simply staying in touch with a group of friends spread across the world, POC radios deliver clear, reliable communication wherever a cellular signal exists. The problem, until recently, was that most of these radios were designed almost entirely with sighted users in mind — packed with visual menus, small unlabeled buttons, and displays that offered little to no spoken feedback.

That gap has now been addressed, and the story of how it happened is as encouraging as the product itself.

The Road to the Lucid

Simple PTT, a U.S.-based POC radio provider run by Scott Johnson — known in the community as “The Magician” for his ability to make things happen — was approached by a visually impaired user who saw an opportunity. Jed Barton, known online as JetN1JBC, raised the subject of accessibility directly with Johnson, explaining that the blind and low-vision community represented not just a market, but a group of people who genuinely stand to benefit from reliable push-to-talk communication. Johnson listened, took the idea seriously, and within approximately three weeks, worked with a hardware manufacturer to bring an accessible radio to life.

That radio is called the Lucid.

What the Lucid Is

The 2026 Lucid is a nationwide PTT walkie-talkie from Simple PTT, currently available at an introductory sale price of $99.99 (regularly $129.99). It operates over cellular networks using a multi-carrier SIM that floats between AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile, meaning coverage follows you across the country rather than being tied to any single carrier’s footprint.

The hardware itself is compact — measuring just 1.18 inches deep by 1.97 inches wide by 3.74 inches tall — and thoughtfully minimal. There are seven buttons total: a push-to-talk button on the left side, volume up and down, and four buttons across the front face beneath the display. That simplicity is intentional. Scott Johnson designed this radio with ease of use as a guiding principle, and for blind users specifically, a low button count means less confusion and faster muscle memory.

Under the hood, the Lucid carries a 4800mAh battery capable of all-day talk time and up to seven days on standby. It charges via USB-C, supports fast charging, and handles a wide range of LTE bands. For audio fidelity, it uses a high-sensitivity microphone combined with AI-driven noise cancellation that the manufacturer claims eliminates over 95 percent of background noise — a real benefit for users in busy or outdoor environments.

The Accessibility Feature That Changes Everything

What sets the Lucid apart from every other POC radio on the market is its spoken menu system. Every menu option, channel name, and member name is read aloud by the radio. You do not need to see the screen. You do not need a sighted assistant. You navigate the radio entirely through audio feedback and the physical buttons.

Jed Barton put together an audio demonstration of the Lucid in action, and it is well worth a listen for anyone who wants to experience the radio’s navigation firsthand. In the recording, Barton walks through the menus in real time, demonstrates navigating talk groups (the POC equivalent of channels), performs a private call to a friend in Boston, and shows how the member list functions — all without referring to the display at all.

The voice is what Barton cheerfully calls “a little Chinese-ish” — a result of the radio’s firmware originating from a Chinese manufacturer. It is not a polished American English voice, but it is clear, functional, and consistent. More importantly, it speaks. For a community that has long had to work around radios that communicate exclusively through tiny visual displays, a voice that reliably reads every menu item is a genuine breakthrough.

How the Platform Works

Simple PTT’s network has a strong community dimension. The platform hosts a wide range of public talk groups — the equivalent of open channels — where users from all over the world gather to connect and coordinate. Available groups include:

  • General social channels like The Hangout
  • POC Skywarn, for weather spotting and severe weather coordination
  • POC WX Alerts, for weather alert monitoring
  • Regional and purpose-driven channels for emergency preparedness and local communities

Switching between talk groups on the Lucid is as simple as navigating up or down with the arrow button and pressing the menu key to select. The radio announces the group name at each step, so you always know exactly where you are.

Private calls are equally accessible. From the member list, a user arrows to the name of the person they want to reach, selects them with the menu key, and keys the push-to-talk button. No guesswork required.

SIM plans vary, but unlimited service options are available, making the total cost of ownership — hardware plus service — quite competitive compared to licensing fees and equipment costs associated with traditional ham or GMRS radio setups.

Why This Matters

POC radio has always had real-world utility for the blind community. The ability to communicate instantly with a group — whether a family, a volunteer team, or a community of fellow users — without depending on the visual interface of a smartphone is genuinely valuable. The Lucid removes the last major obstacle, which was the radios themselves. What had been a category that required sighted assistance to configure and navigate is now independently operable by a blind user from the moment they take it out of the box.

The speed with which Simple PTT responded to the community’s request — roughly three weeks from conversation to finished product — also says something. It demonstrates that when manufacturers are willing to engage directly with blind users, meaningful accessibility improvements are achievable without years of advocacy campaigns or regulatory pressure. Scott Johnson heard a clear case for inclusion and made it happen.

Where to Learn More

The Lucid is available directly from Simple PTT at SimplePTT.com. The product page includes full specifications and SIM plan options. Jed Barton’s audio demonstration is an excellent companion resource, providing an honest and thorough walkthrough of the radio’s accessibility features in real-world conditions — a strong first step for anyone considering a purchase or simply wanting to hear the radio in action.

For blind and low-vision users who have been curious about POC radio but held back by accessibility concerns, the Lucid is a strong reason to take a second look at this technology. The network is already out there, the community is active and welcoming, and now the radio has finally caught up.