Turn Your House Plants Into Speakers
thermopile writes "According to this story, your everyday houseplants could be turned into room-filling speakers. Called Ka-on ('Flower Sound' in Japanese), the machine consists of a donut-shaped magnet and coil at the base of a vase that hooks up to a CD player, stereo or TV. Prices range from $46 to $460. I don't know about you, but I'd hate getting fragged by that plant over there while playing Doom 3..."
Hmmmm, I wonder what the sound quality is... I recently bought this device, but the sound quality is really poor... nice idea though!
- Leon Mergen
http://www.solatis.com
Three of Nine
Déjà vu?
:wq!
This is a report, but not of the same article. You can mention things more than once! :-)
"Later this month, you'll be able to carry on a telephone conversation with a flower with a planned speaker phone model."
So this is indeed new! I would love that. Now I just read Light Fantastic - where Rincewind is convinced the trees aren't talking to him!
Little did he know it was all Ka-on (flower sound) and twoflower could have told him that!
lol zomg rolflmao etc etc.
#hostfile 0.0.0.0 primidi.com 0.0.0.0 www.primidi.com 0.0.0.0 radio.weblogs.com
This is pretty cool, especially for some geeks that are high on gardening.
Would like to try this myself.
Sunset over the lake, cool mist over the bridge; A leave upon the ripples, the snow reflects its glow.
for more accurate sound. Ipod -> FM transmitter -> Tube radio -> Flower...
Something... just something... tells me that this isn't going to catch on. The fact that its both Japanese and relatively useless is a hint.
I quote from the original -
Posted by CmdrTaco on Wednesday July 21, @02:44PM from the listening-to-foghat-on-your-ficas dept. Kerhop writes "People who like talking to their plants can now enjoy a musical accompaniment, thanks to a Japanese invention that turns petals and leaves into amplifiers. Several others are also reporting details of how it works."
On second thoughts - this plant as speaker idea is not so hot either....
See that long UID - that's what you get for lurking too long
I am absolutely amazed that they named it in honest-to-god pseudo-Chinese rather than calling it 'furauaa saundo' or something.
Next, they'll start naming things in actual Japanese. Oh, wait, that would require attention to aesthetics and meaning rather than to sounding cool and vague.
Bring back Heian period Japanese, say I.
PS I am not a crank.
Whence? Hence. Whither? Thither.
Here you can see some pictures:
http://www.lets-direct.jp/fsp/fsp3.htm (Mostly pictures of flowers in a vase).
I wonder if the last vase is really seven times more expensive than the first one.
Me
I am actually quite interested in this thing. The big question is what plant species have the best acoustics (i never thought id say that). Would it be better to have a plant with large leaves, small leaves, one stem, bushy, or do flowers sound better. If someone knows something about this please share. And I wouldn't consider this a mere novelty. In the narrow sense, yes it it to people like me but for what I think is the targeted demographic, people who own a hackey sack (or frisbee) collection, whittle wood, are always wearing a "Phish" t-shirt, and watch "willie wonka and the chocolate factory" on a weekly basis, having a musical plant is a major advance in critical technology. Unfortunately, the marketing strategy failed to notice that the young and avid gardeners of modern society don't keep their house plants lying around the house, out in the open where any one can find them, like say, the police. I think that once some acoustic testing gets done I'm gonna have to invest everything I Have in the bonzai tree industry. Once the word gets out about the acoustics I'll be making a nickel for every tree manufactured and assembled in factories nation wide. But seriously, what factors would make the difference for better sound?
I'm not sure I'll take horticultural advice from someone who has a _rubber_ plant on his desk ...
Uh, rubber plants (Ficus elastica) are common household plants, and while they might not be the most difficult plants to keep alive, they still are real, living entities, instead of being made of rubber, as you seem to suggest. I'm not sure I'd listen to critique of one's horticultural knowledge from someone who doesn't even know the rubber plant...
my speakers just died.
;)
And the way my plants hold up, i'd have to buy new
speakers every two weeks.