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The Lamps Are The Network

An anonymous reader sent us an interesting story that talks about using the flickers in flourescent lamps to do something beside's give me headaches. They actually are using them as a network to send things like audio. There are numerous possible applications of this, but I'd tend to think some sort of other standard that would let us eliminate those cursed lights would be better. Regardless, it's a damn cool hack.

5 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. Old news (sort of ...) by taniwha · · Score: 5
    Where I grew up (which shall rename nameless) the local utility used tones sent thru the power mains to turn on/off things like street lights and electric hot water heaters/storage heaters during peak times (this was really low tech using reed-relays) - it was also annoying - they would come thru your stereo too.

    Anyway for a lark a friend of mine built this humungo tone generator and connected it to his house mains .... then in the wee hours of the morning used it to send morse across town .... by turning on and off all the street lights in his neighborhood ....

  2. Why the handicapped? by selectspec · · Score: 5
    Have you ever noticed that the inventor of these inventions always present some altruistic (but totally far-fetched) application for their technology? Nothing against this guy. His tech looks really cool and will have lots of applications. But, who thought up helping blind people navigate through airports?

    The design meeting:
    So what will people use this thing for?
    hmmm how about another delivery system for Bluetooth?
    ...nah.
    How about a communication alternative for the navy?
    ....mmmm no that's no good
    hmm
    How about a way to alert blind patients with Heart Diease of impending transplants availability as they walk along the mall escalator?
    BINGO!

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    Someone you trust is one of us.

  3. Incadescent Lights sue Fluorescent lights by phunhippy · · Score: 5

    In a bold move, Mr Lite brite, representing Incadescent bulbs everywhere has filed suit in federal court today. "We are asking for a complete cease of data transmission through Fluorescent lights" said Mr Lite brite at a news conference this morning.

    He went on to say that "This is a new form of aparthied!, If this is allowed to continue, Incadescent lights everywhere will be swapped out prematurely from there life spans and replaced with Fluorescent lights that can transmit data as well as provide well balanced illumination for billions of people around the world. Us Incadecent bulbs will be quickly replaced and stop manufactured and we shall die out, I simply can not allow this type of genocide to continue."

    Lighting Analyst B. Franklin worries that this law suit if it prevails could set back new data services 15-20 years, GE's stock tumbled 20 points on the news as well... developing....

  4. Now heres something I can support! by PopeAlien · · Score: 5

    I would fully support any effort by the RIAA to eliminate fluorescent lights to prevent file-sharing. It would save me the effort of looking for a ladder to remove the tubes from my office ceiling.

  5. Multi-threaded String LANs on the Way by Magumbo · · Score: 5
    Data hidden in the vibration of strings may help the disabled lead independent lives.

    The vibration of a string, long a symbol associated with guitars, violins, and other stringed instruments, may give new freedom to the handicapped, thanks to a low-tech startup that sees the strings as the perfect transmitters.

    Talking Strings, a Cambridge-based MIT spinoff, is developing a local area network that uses fluctuations in thin strands of thread to transmit data. Inventor, company founder and MIT professor Steven Dweeb predicts the technology will be a boon for the disabled.

    For example, he says, shoe strings could direct a blind person carrying a special receiver-worn as a badge or held like a PDA-to the correct gate. Thick metal "round wound" bass strings attached to a person's eardrum could broadcast enhanced audio to the hearing disabled, or transcriptions to the deaf. And research published this month suggests that the technology could greatly improve the rehabilitation of persons with traumatic brain injury.

    Hallelujah

    In his MIT laboratory, Dweeb recently demonstrated his invention. First, he pulled out a 2 foot strand of waxed mint dental floss. "See?" he asked. "A normal piece of floss. You probably have some in your bathroom."

    Next, he picked up his receiver--a black coffee can with a small hole poked in the end. From a few feet away, he tightened the string and plucked it. Twangy music blared from the can. Tinny, but clear, came the familiar chorus from Handel's Messiah.

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