

Not often, but those “agree to extra terms to continue viewing the content that you were already looking at for 0.9 seconds” pop-ups (cookie walls and the like) sometimes pop the agree button exactly under where I’m clicking, or activate the button with spacebar that I was just using to scroll down a page
Always wonder if it is a valid legal defense if the pop-up can be dismissed faster than it is possible to read them, but I’m afraid of the potential global consequences if I were to challenge that
Probably related: apparently (some?) people can learn to use echolocation. Particularly useful for blind people of course, but I’ve read it’s too much effort and too limited compared to the alternative solutions so that it’s generally not considered worth pursuing. Naturally I had to try it myself: distinguishing the distance to one wall isn’t hard at all, at least coarsely; the difficulty seems to be in rapidly (while walking) finding smaller objects (especially ones that dampen sound), figuring out angles if you’re not facing or precisely perpendicular to a wall, and dealing with background noise
With your superhuman hearing, maybe you’d enjoy casually learning to do this at some level and getting some use out of the hearing sensitivity :)