Alright readers, get ready to have your minds proverbially blown! Imagine you are shopping in a grocery store, strolling through the aisles, when all of a sudden the cereal begins talking to you. You step back, and look around. No one else seems to notice. You move forward again and hear the commercial persuading you to select and purchase Lucky Charms. Have you finally lost the last little hold you had on sanity? Or is it a hypersonic sound beam, intended for your ears only?
Chances are, in the near future, supermarket shelves will be lined with these sneaky sound systems, but they aren’t just for use in advertising. This ultra-cool technology remotely transfers sound waves in tightly focused “columns” of sound. Once directed to and landing on any surface, (ie. ceilings, floors, walls, paintings, sculptures, advertisements, or even people!) they instantly become a source of sound. The sound waves can then be processed and heard by only people in the direct path of the audio. Surprisingly, the sound seems to come from inside the head, as it acts like a speaker while transmitting the sounds to the brain.
Imagine the implications this could have for a trip to the zoo or museum! A person standing in front of an exhibit might be able to listen to an informative lecture on the subject without disturbing those around them. The need for headphones and bulky “audio guide” systems could be completely eliminated. Automobile manufacturers could use the technology for hands-free cell phone conversations which would reduce the possibility of accidents while driving.
So how does it all work? Well, I’m not an audio expert, but a little Googling revealed the science behind the innovation. Normal sound travels on small pressure waves in the air. Changing the sound wave changes the frequencies that “pop up” within the wave. If you add some high-frequency sounds into the mix (sounds human ears can’t detect,) they generate new low-frequency sounds that we can hear. With a product like this, you can step into the beam and hear the information, or step out and not be bothered by it. The genius that invented a working model for this concept, Woody Norris, received the Lemelson-MIT prize of $500,000 a few years back. The father of 11 has over 50 patents, including a personal helicopter! With 11 children, no wonder he felt it necessary to divert unwanted sounds… It would certainly make airplane rides more enjoyable if we could direct children’s screaming through Hypersonic Sound Beams!
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February 25th, 2008 at 1:24 am
it’s a darn shame all the really fun technology gets hijacked at some point by the advertising and/or military industries.
February 25th, 2008 at 7:18 am
But at least we got microwaves and velcro from them!
February 28th, 2008 at 2:19 pm
soooo … cluster …. what industry or better what would YOU do with it that’s so great ?
Or is childish complaining your kneejerk pose?
February 29th, 2008 at 2:02 am
@Bosco
Lifeguard and rescue, per-passenger audio isolation for planes ( no more headsets ), multi-genre dance floors in night clubs & discos, audio isolation for laptop and handheld computing/gaming, multi-lingual signage for tourism and information booths, err.. the list goes on and on
March 7th, 2008 at 10:31 pm
yeah I couldnt agree more with custer.
when this gets used in advertising it’s gonna be so obnoxious.
March 8th, 2008 at 12:31 am
they already used it in a promotional ad in times square, it scared most of the people who walked by it. then they had to creator walk by it and he got creeped out too so they took it down.
March 8th, 2008 at 2:36 am
It would really infuriate me to walk into a store and hear a disembodied voice attempting to cajole or manipulate me. I would want to destroy the speaker-assuming I could find it. Just try and convince these people that just because they *can* doesn’t mean they *should*. They will not be able to understand you.
March 8th, 2008 at 9:32 am
Interesting…I can imagine that it could be kind of freaky.
March 17th, 2008 at 9:51 am
I see the future and it’s a society of schizophrenics.
April 4th, 2008 at 8:28 pm
I have “felt” one of these at a newspaper stand at the train station in Chicago. It was the oddest sensation. You can only hear it when you stand in one spot and when you hear it, it really does feel as if you are hearing it inside of your head. It’s a little disturbing but mostly awesome. It’s more disturbing when you aren’t directly in the beam because it’s almost as if you hear a ringing in your ear that is saying something but you can’t quite make it out. If you find one move around the direct beam and you will feel and hear what I am talking about. Sweet. I love the future. It just sucks that you can only experience it once. After that it’s just the now.