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Chemical "Infofuses" Communicate Without Electricity

Al writes "Researchers at Harvard and Tufts University have developed a way to send coded messages without using electricity. David Walt, professor of chemistry at Tufts, and Harvard's George Whitesides have developed 'infofuses' that can transmit information simply by burning. The fuses — metallic salts depositing on a nitrocellulose strand — emit pulses of infrared and visible light of different colors whose sequence encodes information. They were developed in response to a call from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency for technologies to allow soldiers stranded without a power source to communicate. In the first demonstration of the idea, they used the infofuses to transmit the message look mom no electricity." Currently the researchers are "trying to figure out a way to dynamically encode a message on the fly in the field without specialized equipment."

2 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Tarps, flags, semaphore, mirrors.... by fooslacker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Maybe I'm feeding the trolls but perhaps the key is that it's not a giant flag telling the enemy where you are down behind enemy lines. Maybe the fact that it's IR and can be activated when you hear your rescue run coming could have something to do with the fact that DARPA finds value in it.

  2. Re:hand cranked flashlight by sortius_nod · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is the same thing I was thinking of. Is it really any use as the receiver needs to have at least a camera and laptop, or some specialised decoder device to even make this usable.

    While the technology seems neat, it also seems a bit more like a weekend project of someone with an inkjet printer and some chemicals. Did it really require funding from DARPA? I'd hazard a guess and say "no".