Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Super Bowl tactile device lets your hands follow the ball

A OneCourt tablet will give some blind and low-vision fans a touch-first view of the game, with live audio in their headphones so the action stays synced.

Add as a preferred source on Google
People, Person, Crowd
Ticketmaster

A small group of blind and low-vision fans will experience the Super Bowl with a Super Bowl tactile device that renders the ball’s location through touch. The tablet also delivers vibration cues for key moments, so big plays don’t blur into crowd noise.

The NFL is teaming up with OneCourt and Ticketmaster to bring the setup to Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, when Seattle plays New England on Feb. 8. Around 10 attendees are expected to use the device in their seats, with a live Westwood One broadcast feed running through headphones.

Recommended Videos

Timing is the difference. If you’ve ever followed a game by audio with a delay, you know how quickly the moment can slip away.

The field comes alive under your hands

The OneCourt unit is about the size of a thick iPad, with raised lines outlining a football field. With both hands on the surface, fans can feel the ball move upfield, drift toward the sideline, or swing back the other way.

Vibration patterns add another layer. Different pulses signal different events, so the device can call attention to a change before someone nearby has to explain it.

The NFL has already run the experience 15 times during the regular season at games hosted by the Seahawks, Jaguars, 49ers, Falcons, and Vikings. Bringing it to the Super Bowl is the loudest test yet.

Touch alone doesn’t solve everything. The tablet is paired with live audio so what you feel lines up with what you hear, instead of arriving late through a stream or a delayed broadcast.

Where this goes after the Super Bowl

OneCourt is already working beyond football. It has partnered with NBA and Major League Baseball teams to offer devices at games, and it’s in talks to bring the approach to the NHL and other leagues.

The Super Bowl rollout is still limited, and details like how fans request a unit or how widely it scales aren’t spelled out here. The next thing to watch is whether it shows up at more stadiums next season, with access that feels as routine as any other accommodation.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
This $249 LED sign wants to fix your work-life balance
My productivity isn't worth $249... or is it?
Flipper Busy Bar

Flipper Devices has built a reputation among hackers and hardware enthusiasts with the Flipper Zero, a pocket-sized gadget capable of interacting with RFID, NFC, Bluetooth, and other wireless protocols. Now, the London-based company is taking a very different approach.

Its latest product, the Busy Bar, is a desktop productivity display designed to help users stay focused, signal their availability, and automate parts of their workflow. After being teased last year, the device is finally going on sale on July 14. While the concept is genuinely clever, its starting price of up to $249 may make many buyers think twice.

Read more
FAA clears the runway for Mach flights that could cut travel times nearly in half
New regulations could dramatically reduce travel times while keeping sonic booms under control.
Supersonic Flight Time

The dream of flying faster than the speed of sound just took a major step forward. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has announced a proposed rule that would create the first noise-based certification standards for a new generation of supersonic passenger aircraft, removing one of the biggest regulatory hurdles standing in the way of commercial Mach 1+ flights.

The goal is simple: fly faster without the boom

Read more
NotebookLM’s 60-second videos turned my doomscrolling curse into something useful
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

Short videos have taken over just about every app we use. You scroll through them on X, lose track of time on Instagram, watch them on YouTube, and now even Netflix has its own bite-sized feed. So when I heard that Google was bringing the format to NotebookLM, it felt both surprising and completely inevitable at the same time.

Google has announced Short Video Overviews for NotebookLM, a feature that turns dense documents and complicated sources into 60-second vertical videos that explain key ideas. Instead of staring at pages of notes, you get a quick visual walkthrough of the concept you're trying to understand.

Read more