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Is RCA's Airnergy Snake Oil?

Ben Newman writes "Of all the tech that's come out of CES this week, nothing has gotten the blogosphere more excited then the RCA Airnergy. A lot of people love the thought of an ever-recharging cell phone, and the Airnergy promises to constantly charge its internal battery through 2.4GHz wireless signals. Neat idea, but as some commenters have pointed out the energy just isn't there to make this work — BOTECs for a full charge range from 100 days to 32 years. Plus, don't let the RCA brand fool you into thinking this must be from a legitimate company: RCA hasn't existed as anything more then a licensed brand name for a couple of decades. So what do Slashdotters think — real deal or 21st century hokum?"

4 of 271 comments (clear)

  1. Yeah, tens of meters from a 50mW power source... by francium+de+neobie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is totally gonna charge up your battery and run your cell phone for days.

    The inverse square law and dBm being a logarithmic unit can all go to hell.

  2. In answer to the headline, let's simply say by MrEricSir · · Score: 4, Insightful

    YES

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
  3. back to basics by vacarul · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'll get more energy with a hand-crank generator...

  4. Re:Yeah, tens of meters from a 50mW power source.. by aXis100 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Frequency plays a massive difference in EM radiation and magnetic induction.

    For EM, you really need an antenna that's close to the wavelength, and for 50Hz that's 6000km. For 2.4GHz it's about 12cm.

    For induction, frequency affects the overall number of turns required. A 50Hz transformer that copes with 300W is the size of a shoe box, but for a switchmode power supply at 100KHz it's the size of a match box.