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posted by janrinok on Friday November 11 2016, @10:03AM   Printer-friendly
from the sounds-good dept.

Low tech sometimes succeeds where high tech fails – as one ingenious company is proving.

Chirp sends data over sound, a burst of audio that usually sounds like a bird's tweet. It doesn't transmit much data – 50 bytes – but it turns out you don't need much bandwidth to bridge the gaps between the real world and the digital world.

Chirp has already been put to use, and unusually for a small company, boasts hundreds of millions of users. Spun out of research at UCL, Chirp first stepped into the public eye four years ago with a consumer app. But it recently switched to a B2B model – licensing the technology for use in all kinds of cases via a software development kit.

...

Sound has obvious disadvantages. One is that it needs to deal with noise interference, which is everywhere. And in the open, the range is short: 10 to 20 feet. But the big advantage is easy to miss: the audio bursts are a one-to-many, multidirectional transmission. So Chirps can be used as a signal – say a trigger, or a wake up call – for millions of digital devices at once. It can be played at a stadium, for example.


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  • (Score: 2) by VLM on Friday November 11 2016, @01:17PM

    by VLM (445) on Friday November 11 2016, @01:17PM (#425657)

    In my experience, "X" loading was extremely robust (unlike "Y" loading).

    In the late 70s to mid 80s home computer boom this was true for all values of X and Y. Lot of mythology and such.

    Some systems did categorically beat others, IIRC the TRS-80 model 1 was both slower AND less reliable than the model 3, somehow.

    Back in the old days things were simpler... 1 bit A/D "zero crossing detector" input circuitry meant an audio channel wide enough and quiet enough to fit 10 or so parallel 28.8K telephone modem signals barely worked at 600 baud, sometimes, for example.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 11 2016, @02:35PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 11 2016, @02:35PM (#425673)

    When I wrote "extremely robust" I meant not just "much more robust than the ZX81", I meant "so robust that I don't remember it failing even a single time (for content that used the built-in method)."

  • (Score: 2) by Hairyfeet on Friday November 11 2016, @09:47PM

    by Hairyfeet (75) <bassbeast1968NO@SPAMgmail.com> on Friday November 11 2016, @09:47PM (#425833) Journal

    The VIC-20. Oh lord the VIC-20, I loved my VIC but good lord did it take ages to load!

    --
    ACs are never seen so don't bother. Always ready to show SJWs for the racists they are.