h a l f b a k e r yOn the one hand, true. On the other hand, bollocks.
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I find that if I have to get up and go to a different room to stop an alarm, I am generally awake enough not to return to bed.
The idea, then is an alarm application on a smartphone which goes off, and lets the user press mute. They then have 2 minutes to go to another room in order to switch it off.
If you fail, a very loud and un-muteable alarm goes off for some 30s or so.
Location detection: several options:
GPS - most phones have GPS in them, but it may not be sensitive enough or work inside buildings.
Wifi signal strength - assuming you have a router, the signal strength will be higher/lower in the target room.
Scan a barcode in the target room - using a standard barcode on the back of some item, e.g. a book, in the target location.
The second unstoppable alarm is intended as a threat, particularly effective if you live with other people and do not want to disturb them. Alternatives from the long line of alarm threats are possible; I think there was one which donated some amount of your money to charity if you didn't get up in time.
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I find that if I have to get up and go to a different room to stop an alarm, that alarm will never sound again. |
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Not sure about GPS resolution. |
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WiFi signal is subject to too many variables other than location. |
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The barcode thing would just result in moving the book to the room I'm sleeping in. |
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Perhaps a more carrot based solution is in order (as opposed to stick based solutions). May I suggest the 'wake up, go to work and you will be paid' incentive. If you're not familiar with this process, get a job. |
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//barcode on the back of some item, e.g. a // milk carton |
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Or--for much less than the cost of a smartphone--you
could just buy two battery-powered alarm clocks, one
near to wake you, the other in the next room to make you
get up. It's worked for me for years now. |
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How about an alarm that uses accelerometer data from the phone to make you do 20 jumping jacks before the alarm goes off? That way you have to move around alot, and you can't just throw the phone. It could yell lines from Full Metal Jacket at you. |
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We used to have a spherical clock with a motion sensor
that would roll away from you when you reached for it.
We lost ours when we moved and I haven't bothered to
look for another. The thing didn't have advanced object
avoidance programming, but if I set it up the right way at
night it would roll off the nightstand and head out the door
for the living room, or until captured by a dog. |
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//lost// Or perhaps it escaped. |
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Even today, packs of feral alarm clocks roam the wilds of
Maine... |
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You should have had it neutered. |
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I dunno about analog clocks, but the potential neuteree in
this case is a digital clock (or the feral descendants
thereof). |
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I'm sorry, you've lost me. I thought we were talking about
clocks. |
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