The wearable, named Dot, relays the time with a set of pins that rise and fall. Users will be able to receive and read text messages in real time, read e-books and even learn Braille.
When it comes to watches for the visually impaired, there are not many devices that use real-time Braille text - and the ones that do typically cost thousands of dollars.
Dot, its creators claim, is the first affordable smartwatch for the visually challenged that uses haptic technology.
For instance, when a user receives a text message on their mobile phone, an app translates it into Braille and sends it to the smartwatch via Bluetooth, 'Gizmag' reported.
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Dot's internal vibrator motor alerts the user to the message or notification and the display automatically shifts from telling time to displaying the notification.
Pins corresponding to the pattern protrude from Dot's surface, allowing users to read the information with their fingertips. Their reading speed is customisable.
"With four cells, there's a limit to the number of words being displayed at a time. However, unlike modern refreshable braille displays, which read one line at a time, the 'active braille display' is utilised to make braille automatically pass by in the user's hand as if it were an escalator," Koh said.
Since reading long paragraphs on a four-cell Braille device might get tedious, the company plans to create a Braille Pad next that is more suited to reading e-books.