The Mind of an Inventor
kipb writes to tell us that Newsweek has an interesting article about Danny Hillis and the company he co-founded called Applied Minds. One of the featured devices that Hillis talks about is a device designed to increase the amount of privacy one has working in the average corporate cubicle. "Babble" is about the size of a paperback book and plugs into the phone with two external speakers that you place on the top of your cube. While holding a normal conversation on the phone Babble plays back random meaningless snipits of your own voice which makes your conversation practically unintelligible to people as close as 4 feet away.
Ooh. Now I want one of these. Never mind the rest of it, just that last word and perhaps others like it. Hook it up to your VOIP system and call a likeminded prankster, and leave it running. It'd gum up Echelon something awful :-)
Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
--Pat
...reading the linked article? It is full of descriptions of amazing things, and indeed does say that Hillis is quite childlike - his inventions are almost toys, very expensive and shiny toys. It's not just Babble.
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Danny Hillis was once a big name in artificial intelligence.
His Connection Machine was an awesome, state-of-the art supercomputer.
Stumbling upon artificial intelligence was supposed to happen Real Soon Now with Danny's thinking machines.
Thinking Machines was the name Danny gave to his ambitious enterprise.
True Artificial Intelligence proved far too hard for Danny Hillis and now he has gone on to less difficult challenges.
Slashdot readers expect more from the Mind of an Inventor.
Go here to see babble... go here to hear babble.
Actually, there are _very_ effective noise cancellation solutions.
They're called 'walls', and come in a variety of efficiency levels.
However, they're probably not 'hip' enough for todays corporate interior designers, and they may not be patentable, which makes this solution a more desireable one for the interested parties.
I think I heard this guy interviewed on NPR's Day to Day a month or two ago. He contends that it works better than noise cancellation because the nonsense doesn't activate the speech-recognition parts of the brain in the same way that even a quiet conversation down the hall might. In some sense, your brain gives up on trying to interpret the babble and starts ignoring it, whereas a barely-audible conversation will just make some part of your brain work harder to attempt to pick out the signal from the noise.
So, in your case, you would actually be less distracted by the stupid people in the next cube, even though they might objectively be a bit louder.