Beto
I want to be very clear and respectful, anyone who says Braille should go away, no matter what their reasoning is, simply doesn’t understand how essential it is, especially for people with combined sensory loss.
Snehashish Mahato
Patiencefreedom
Melissa Dawn
Jesse🇳🇱🐲
Jesse🇳🇱🐲
Jesse🇳🇱🐲
Melissa Dawn
The AI wizard
About the only time I see braille now is on a hotel room label. 
Olga petrovic vukeljic
Ben Bloomgren
Ethan Bloodworth
There’s nothing like being able to put your hands on material that you need. I use braille quite often. Either when I’m trying to reference materials through books from book share on a notetaker, or using the braille display from the national library service to connect to my phone or computer. Then, of course, there are still signs, and letters from Social Security that are produced in braille. I even have braille cards and dice, I’m a dungeon master.
Beto
Braille is absolutely still useful today! Audio does not compare. I see braille and audio as two totally different things, each with their own pros and cons. Braille, for example, is easier to integrate but more expensive to produce. Audio is cheaper to produce, but harder to integrate. When building new buildings, it is easier to just put a plaque on doors and label them in braille than it is to equipped the building with an audio labeling system, having something like an app to work with the audio labeling system, and teaching everyone, blind and sighted, how to use the audio system. Braille, on the other hand, is for the most part already taught, so any blind person going into a building and finding braille would automatically know how to read it. You could write sensitive information down in braille, and only a handful of people would know how to read. If you use audio or text to write down this information, it is easier for a lot more people to access. 
Seva