Home → News → What Does a Forehand Winner Sound Like? Clink, Blip... → Full Text

What Does a Forehand Winner Sound Like? Clink, Blip-Blip-Blip!

By The New York Times

January 28, 2022

[article image]


Rapid, echoing pops go off in Michael Marshall's ears when he listens to an Australian Open tennis match, followed closely by high- and low-pitched clinks. Three pops on the left signal that the ball landed close to the line; a low-pitched clink means that the player returned it with a backhand stroke.

Without context, these noises might sound like arcade sound effects or some new version of Morse code — but each one is a message meant to help people who are blind or have limited vision follow the game. A new technology, called Action Audio, is being tested on a large scale for the first time at this year's Australian Open, where every match in the Rod Laver Arena is available on a livestream with this accessibility feature.

From The New York Times
View Full Article

 

0 Comments

No entries found