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Focusing Audio

Alien54 writes: "The fine folks at the MIT Sound Media Lab have come up with a cheap and practical way to focus sound: "A beam of light can be controlled in many ways - it can be aimed at one person in a crowd, spread to fill a room, or projected to create rich, distant imagery. We can now do these very same things with sound. The Audio Spotlight can be used in two major ways: As directed audio, sound is directed at a specific listener or area, to provide a private or area specific listening space. As projected audio, sound is projected against a distant object, creating an audio image. This audio image is literally a projected loudspeaker - sound appears to come directly from the projection, just like light." While still under development, they are testing applications of the device in collaboration with several of their media lab sponsors in preparation for eventual commercial release."

6 of 171 comments (clear)

  1. Sonic guns by slickwillie · · Score: 4

    I'd like to have one mounted on my car. Then, when one of those "boom-box cars" rolls up next to me, I'll point my sound cannon at the driver and burst his eardrums.

  2. Re:drugs vs. technology by Electric+Angst · · Score: 5

    were drugs introduced into our society in order to prepare us for the emergence of technologies that would simulate heir same effect?

    Yes exactly. As a matter of fact, I am the intelligence behind such an operation. I personally manipulated the DNA of the first hemp plants to ensure that they would produce THC. The actual process of fermentation, that was me too. It really just involved fucking with some yeast. Of course, then I introduced it to man, in the forms of mead and wine, long before recorded history. I also did LSD (at least, I did the real work behind it. In fact, you name it, I put it here, so your feeble little minds wouldn't explode when you saw a laser light show.

    Believe me, before I altered space-time, the Disney light parade was an absolute killer.

    (Yes, of course this post is sarcastic. My user number is far too high to have been able to do that stuff...)
    --

    --
    Feminism is the wild notion that women are human beings.
  3. Noise-cancelling use? by EricEldred · · Score: 4

    Can this technology be used to cancel noises as well as generate sound?

    I am thinking that current noise-cancelling technology seems to rely on headphones, since noise is generally omnidirectional. But if this technology were used to determine the direction of the noise source, and shift phase of sounds so the sounds appeared to be coming from the same direction, then one might not have to use headphones.

    For example, in a cubicle there are noises all around, from telephones to people talking, and it would be extremely useful to be able to selectively tune out the noises and work without headphones. Currently, I believe "noise cancelling" area systems just generate white noise, which doesn't fix the problem, only create more.

    The lower bass tones could be handled in an area system, I think, because they wouldn't be so directional.

    I mean, doesn't the world suffer from increasing amounts of "noise pollution" as machines proliferate in our increasingly urban environments? Many people including myself would love to be able to take action to control this environment for ourselves and filter out the annoying noises. A much better use than increasily annoying sales pitches beamed directionally at us without any choice.

  4. Hmmmm some interesting fallout from that... by waldeaux · · Score: 4
    ... it'd be a boon for the hearing impaired in public spaces. Amplified sound targeted to where they are sitting/standing.

    I wonder if it could also be used as a weapon. Stun people with an amplified blast long enough to subdue them.

  5. Groupies by TheNightOwl · · Score: 4


    Hey you over there. Yeah you with the red dress. Come on up front. The bass player wants to meet you.

  6. drugs vs. technology by friscolr · · Score: 4
    consider some of the most common side-effects of popular illegal (in U.S.A. and most) drugs - they alter our perceptions, causing us to see things that aren't there, or hear things that aren't there - "the tree man, it's talking to me"

    now a lot of these effects are being duplicated with technology, only they aren't altering the way our brain senses, they are actually creating pseudo-realities for us to exist in (was that ad on the soccer field really there, or was it digitally placed? did the guy sitting next to me see/hear the same ad?)

    were drugs introduced into our society in order to prepare us for the emergence of technologies that would simulate heir same effect? imagine what the world would be like if we were suddenly introduced to a whole bunch of mind-bending technologies. Drugs (and the knowledge of the causes of such drugs, for those who don't partake) gives us the background to understand these technologies.

    just a thought


    -f