Wireless-Friendly Microwaves
Makarand writes "According to this article on ABC News, scientists at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor have stumbled upon a simple and elegant solution to keep your kitchen microwave from
becoming a noisy nuisance to your home Wi-Fi network.
They found that they could focus the microwaves into a single frequency and
reduce noisy
microwave emissions by placing ordinary magnets in specific patterns along the magnetron .
New techniques to reduce microwave interference will be needed when
Wi-Fi enabled entertainment systems will allow digital audio and video to be transmitted
to different rooms of a house wirelessly. Packet drops in such a sytem would degrade the video and audio
experience."
I have big problems with the radio that the CIA implanted in my brain.
They found that they could focus the microwaves into a single frequency
...
Why not go all the way and make the frequency and phase of the microwave oven's magnetron adjustable, add some kind of microcontroller to drive it, and a small cpu to implement the 802.11b stack. Then, from your laptop, run this script:
WIFI_IF=eth0
DATE=`date +%s`
while [ ! $TIMEOUT ];do
DATE_PREV=$DATE
tcpdump -i $WIFI_IF -c 1
DATE=`date +%s`
let TDIFF=DATE-DATE_PREV
if [ $TDIFF -gt 5 ];then
TIMEOUT=1
fi
done
echo "Coffee is hot!"
Ah, the marvels of technology
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
legacy microwaves
Now there's a phrase you'd only hear on slashdot.
Remember, it takes 42 muscles to frown and only 4 to pull the trigger of a sniper rifle.
Microwaves DO interfere with WiFi. Case in point, when my wife is cooking here egg rolls in the microwave, my WiFi signal drops to zero. The microwave finishes and poof...11mb connections. If I can connect, I either get really really really SLOW connections, or I have to be ontop of the AP....literally! 2.4 GHz is what many call the garbage band...you got cordless phones, cellphones are close to it, microwaves, WiFi (both a and g), video units, intercoms, and just about anything you can think of all fighting for spectrum. 5GHz is going to be no better. I am waiting to see if the either start cleaning up 2.4 GHz which would be REALLY hard, or ramp up or down the frequency. I thing the 1.2 GHz ham band would be a good candidate for refarming. From Ham use, it's not even close to being useful for public service and even if there are radios, there's usually noone there even during rush hour. The range would be a bit better then 2.4Ghz and they could totally reserve it for WLANS of all types. As a ham, I am not usually in favor of killing a band (more in favor of addding ham bands), but almost no friends of mine work 1.2GHz and I am sure all of them would like a better WLAN connection! ;)
Gorkman