h a l f b a k e r yRenovating the wheel
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Take them out of your ear and they pause the mp3, cd or tape. Put them back in, they start up again. It could detect the ear through pressure, light or even smell.
Gotuit Radio
http://www.gotuit.com/agradio.html Your headphones could control this PRR device. [bristolz, May 20 2002, last modified Oct 21 2004]
iPod auto-pause
http://www.macworld...rc=editorsblog-0704 Jul 28 2004 [krelnik, Oct 04 2004, last modified Oct 05 2004]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Destination URL.
E.g., https://www.coffee.com/
Description (displayed with the short name and URL.)
|
|
And an agreement for everybody across the country to take their headphones out at the same time. One big collective pop. *grin* |
|
|
What happens if you take out only one earphone - does the music slow down? |
|
|
// What happens if you take out only one earphone - does the music slow down? // |
|
|
Short of psychically detecting which ear you're paying attention to, my guess would be that it carries on. |
|
|
On the subject of radio, it just occurred to me: TiVo! A few minutes' worth of pause memory in the radio. Pull the headphones out, and it reels the radio signal into memory. Next ad break that comes along, you can just spew forwards through it until you hit real time. |
|
|
If one earphone comes out, the set should adjust the balance and volume accordingly. |
|
|
This seems to have promise for media other than live radio. If you work out the ear-detection bit, it should be a simple matter from there to pause an mp3/cd(/cassette?) player. |
|
|
If you're talking about the "ear bud" type devices it could be a bit more difficult but, with a more standard "headphone" you might be able to use a tilt switch to detect whether the headphones are in a relatively upright position on your head or in a laying down position on your desk. (Wouldn't be to swift for listening in bed though.) |
|
|
They could also detect when you fall asleep at your desk unless you can sleep sitting up. This feature could be leveraged to set off an alarm in your ear to wake you. If you have a computer intensive, cubicle resident job then it could, instead of waking you, begin playing keyboard/mouse clicking sounds through external speakers so that it sounds like you're awake and working. |
|
|
yama, sadie, it's strictly against the rules to use real names on the 1/2B. It's like the foreign legion, only with less fez and camel spit. |
|
|
...but more socks and puns. |
|
|
what, eh? who said that? big p of the dessert? camel spit - yuk. |
|
|
Ritually disembowels himself, and deletes the offending posts as they weren't very interesting anyway. |
|
|
Possibly not in that order. |
|
|
I originally meant CD or MP3. Radio was just a joke - that suddenly became viable. Description changed accordingly. |
|
|
For regular headphones, you wouldn't even need a tilt switch, just something triggered by whether the headphones are being stretched by virtue of being on a person's head or are in their natural, more circular shape. |
|
|
The latest incarnation of Apple's iPod, introduced just last week, does this if you unplug the earphones from the unit, which seems pretty close. See link. |
|
| |