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Listen to the Sky

disposable60 writes "Sky Ear will be a one-night event in which a glowing "cloud" of mobile phones and helium balloons is released into the air so that people can dial into the cloud and listen to the sounds of the sky."

13 of 188 comments (clear)

  1. But the question is... by josh+glaser · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...who will answer?

  2. Neat by Bishop,+Martin · · Score: 5, Funny

    I personally like calling stupid people to hear the echo of my voice in their empty head.

    --
    Setec Astronomy
  3. Sound of ringtones by solid · · Score: 5, Funny

    Hope they turn off the ringtones / vibrators.

    *imagines the sound of mission impossible theme over an earpiece*

  4. Roaming by subzerorz · · Score: 5, Funny

    Would that be considered roaming?
    It would be interesting to listen to during a storm or tornado.

    --
    Subzerorz
    More Articles
  5. Re:So where do all these phones land? by MikeJ9919 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Right, but if you'd read the site, you would realize that the whole structure is enclosed in a net which, presumably, they plan on hauling back to earth when finished.

    -Mike-

  6. Free phone, no contract required by Hamstaus · · Score: 5, Funny

    You know, I could really use a new phone. I think I've got some darts and a net around here somewhere...

    --
    I moderate "-1, Fool"
    1. Re:Free phone, no contract required by AndroidCat · · Score: 5, Funny

      And the LORD spake "Doth thou hear ME now?" And it was Good.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  7. I'm confused by Aurelfell · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is April Fools Day the tenth of April in the UK?

  8. Re:Why? What is the point? by deglr6328 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    And why wait?? Listen now, live. (not all at once now!!) If that site goes down, and I presume it will within seconds of posting this, this site has pre-recorded sounds of Earth's natural EM radiation.

    --
    - "Hear that?! The percolations are imminent! Cease your ingress!"
  9. This is art...not science... by Frennzy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    just enjoy it for what it is. Don't you have an inner child that loves balloons? Add that inner child to your outer geek...and this should be good stuff. Come on, not everything has to be bad.

    (begin flame...NOW!)
    (no, I'm not a hippie...but I HAVE been to Burning Man, and am going back this year as well){

  10. Re:Using mobile phones at altitude? by LostCluster · · Score: 5, Informative

    I thought using mobile phones at high altitudes put a strain on the system, because the phone sees so many towers. Or is that an urban legend?

    No, that's a true reason why the FCC prohibits the use of cell phones while in an airplane.

    Within each providers allocated slot of bandwidth, they subdivide that space into a number of channels, and assign each tower on their network a channel. If you're using your phone while in motion, when the signal from the tower you're actively talking falls below the acceptable line, it moves you over to the channel on which you are getting the strongest signal, because that's most likely coming from the tower you've moved closer too. Of course, for this to work, at no place should you be able to get two towers on the same channel... that'd be real confusing, and could lead to calls being assigned to the wrong tower. In practice, that's no big deal, that signal will just weaken quickly and you'll pick again until you get it right.

    However, somebody in a high-altitude plane is in just that ugly situation.... they can see far too many towers from that height with no hills in the way. As proven on 9/11/01, such a call works if done in small numbers... the call will end up bouncing around from tower to tower a lot of times, but since those handoffs are invisible to the user, nothing really bad happens to the call. However, if everybody did that... there'd be far too many transfers for the system to keep up with, and the whole system would bog down. That's one reason why they tell you not to do that.

    The FAA also prohibits the use of cell phones due to a possible risk of interference to the airplane navigation systems. However, this is distinct from the FCC's ban. Even if the FAA were to lighten up on this one, the FCC's ban would be unaffected.

  11. And in other news.... by TribeDoktor · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... Greenwich, London had reported pellet gun sales going through the roof.

  12. Schumann resonance-lightning from around the world by dtmos · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You're probably referring to the Schumann resonance, the resonance of the earth-ionosphere resonant cavity. Energy from lightning around the world excites this resonance, which then rings--much as hitting a bell with a hammer causes the bell to ring.

    Also like an acoustic bell, there is a fundamental frequency of resonance and many overtones that grow fainter as you go up in frequency. The fundamental Schumann resonance is approximately 7.8 Hz; the first few overtones are usually given as 13.8, 19.7, 25.7, and 31.7 Hz. There is a slight variation in the frequencies involved over long periods of time, as the ionosphere changes in response to solar activity.