Generally computer screens emit AM radio waves whenever they work, it is possible that when you do a large screen re-draw it eminates a specific wave length that affects your speaker... Personally this has never happened to me but it's possible.
BTW it is possible to capture your screen using an AM reciever, also the reverse is possible as well - you can use your screen to broadcast music (by emulating the music into a screen image that will broadcast the music) I even saw a program that does this for MP3, but I forgot the name...
If somebody would have bothered to check, the man is a Research Scientist Computer Science (lookup Gary Flake) in the NEC research instiute, with only 70 more researchers with him in the whole place, and let me guess that he has a lot of money to spend...
Give him a little credit, that what he is doing is probably worth the time and effort he is putting in to it, and be thankfull that you are here to hear about such a project (if he'll only tell us what it's about...)
Where I work they don't believe in letting down the pressure...
Whenever I have a free moment, something suddently needs to be done.
Give me some monotony - I know what to do with it!
Enjoy it while you still can.
Interwise is a much better application than WebEx, and also runs in a seperate window (so that closing of IE won't matter at all)
Generally computer screens emit AM radio waves whenever they work, it is possible that when you do a large screen re-draw it eminates a specific wave length that affects your speaker...
Personally this has never happened to me but it's possible.
BTW it is possible to capture your screen using an AM reciever, also the reverse is possible as well - you can use your screen to broadcast music (by emulating the music into a screen image that will broadcast the music) I even saw a program that does this for MP3, but I forgot the name...
Or, what was the question again?
Check out Chameleon Last I checked it looked quite good!
If somebody would have bothered to check, the man is a Research Scientist Computer Science (lookup Gary Flake) in the NEC research instiute, with only 70 more researchers with him in the whole place, and let me guess that he has a lot of money to spend...
Give him a little credit, that what he is doing is probably worth the time and effort he is putting in to it, and be thankfull that you are here to hear about such a project (if he'll only tell us what it's about ...)