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MS Researchers Develop Acoustic Data Transfer System For Phones

angry tapir writes "Smartphones that support NFC have been making their way onto the market, but many handsets still don't support the wireless technology. As an alternative, Microsoft researchers have prototyped a system that instead uses a phone's microphone and speaker to transmit and receive data. The P2P data transfer system uses a novel technique of 'self-jamming' to stop nefarious third parties from monitoring transfers, and the researchers believe it's more secure than standard NFC communications. No word on whether it sounds like the squeal of a 56k modem."

2 of 180 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And they call it by krlynch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've always found it interesting that "modem" and "modern" are so easy to confuse in most fonts....

  2. Re:Return of the acoustic modem by goombah99 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Grandpa here.
          My recollection is that paper tapes and punchcard readers where a lot faster than cassette tapes for loading in programs. The reason cassettes were nice is that that the cost of the reader hardware was cheap--you probably already had a casstte player. and the results were compact. In my experience the paper tapes were the most durable. the tapes tended to go bad on you or not work between different machines with different settings. If you dropped your punch card deck it could get scrambled. the paper tapes were compact and reliable.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.