 The senses. Design beyond vision. Dot watch. The dot watch displays the time and text messages in Braille. A man uses a wrist watch with a round white face featuring grids of tiny dots instead of conventional hands or digital numerals. As he presses a side button and dials the crown, tactile Braille characters pop up. He reads them with his fingertip. The dot watch is just the beginning. Two more devices are shown, one the size of a smartphone and the other a palm-sized square. They feature larger grids of tactile dots as well as buttons, round touch pads, and interface ports. The Dot Mini is an affordable device under $200 for developing regions. The devices are used by school children and by young people working in an office. They move their fingertips across the tactile dots to read them. Braille display cells are manufactured and laid out in a connected grid. This is Dot Public. On a train platform, a vertical display board features an analog clock, printed maps, a fire extinguisher, and a dynamic Braille grid. A young man stares at a computer monitor. Individuals test the dot watch. A young woman smiles. A girl beams. And a grin washes over a child's face. Dot.