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DIY Texting System For Really Underground Radio

Gulthek writes "Sixteen-year-old Alexander Kendrick has created a device that allows texting and other data transfer from almost 1000 feet underground. The tech could allow rapid emergency communication with the surface and opens the potential for scientific measurements without the need to continually visit (and disturb) the cave environment." There's some kvetching in the NPR story's comments that it's not the first use of cave radios, but that seems to miss the point.

2 of 98 comments (clear)

  1. The article's more interesting point is buried by JoshuaZ · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The article also talks about how this could be used by scientists who are investigating or monitoring life in caves and that this could be used to help find useful substances being made by life in the caves. From the article:

    But scientists think one of the biggest threats to this emerging source of antibiotics is actually the scientists themselves. In fact, researchers believe the more they visit a cave, the less likely they are to find antibiotics. People contaminate the sensitive cave environment just by being there. Northup thinks that by connecting data recorders to Kendrick's radio, scientists could remotely transmit information about the cave environment. "So a cave radio that allows you to beam data to the surface rather than visiting it in person can be extremely valuable," she says. "It could save the cave."

    Frankly, this doesn't seem that likely since to check if something is a useful antibiotic it needs to be tested against actual cultures generally. However, this does have serious potential of helping and of increasing our knowledge base. General medical knowledge and more anti-biotics will likely save far more lives than using the technology just to rescue people who occasionally get trapped in caves.

  2. Then what is the point? by SuperBanana · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Well, what is the point, then?

    VLF systems have been in use for decades to communicate with the US Submarine fleet, not because of interference, but because it passes through just about everything and has a very, very wide propagation. Unfortunately, the power levels are so high that people wonder/suspect it's causing nature / health problems for nearby residents.

    I mean for fucks' sakes, this stuff was in use by the German navy during WW2- 70 years ago. All this kid did was apply the obvious, and apparently, it's so obvious, someone thought of it 40 years ago. More info:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Very_low_frequency

    Also, the kid didn't implement any sort of retransmission or error correction. That makes it pretty useless for both emergencies (imagine: "person has 3 hours to live" instead of "30 hours") and scientific data collection. It's also pretty standard these days.