Invisible Wireless Spy Earpiece
This is the most advance wireless earpiece receiver for covert operations.
The set contains the earpiece together with a inductive loop.
The micro-earphone is hidden deep inside the ear
Whereas the inductive loop is hidden under the clothes and therefore extremely difficult or even impossible to detect
The main purpose of the spy earpiece set is to provide invisible communication over a cell phone. You need it when you are:
1: passing exams or taking tests
2: making speech at a meeting or negotiations
3: working as a security guard
Benefits of using Spy Earpiece set with you cell phone:
- if you are a student you pass your exams without prior preparation. You don't need to fill up your head with heaps of facts and dates. Your partner will give them to you over the phone.
- if you are a businessman you get information from your colleagues in real time while carrying on negotiations. You will not get into embarrassing situations when you are stumped for an answer.
- if you are a politician you look confident in front of your audience as you don't have to sight-read your speech anymore. Your assistant will make sure you remember all your arguments.
- if you are a security guard you secretly get and give instructions to your co-workers. You stait intermingled with the crowd and keep the situation under control.
if you are a gambler you get help from your friend when you need advice during the game. Nobody will notice that you cheat. - if you are a host of the show you are in the center of everybody's attention. You can make no mistakes, the spy earpiece and your team will help you out.
Specification:
Compatibility : The earphone, together with the inductive loop work with mobile telephones, radiotelephones, to enable two-way communication.
They may also be used to play the sound using any portable sound player: an mp3 player, a Dictaphone, etc
Size : 5x7x10mm
Shape : anatomical shape
Receiver type : magnetic/analogue
Maximmum volume : 110dB
Battery : sony sr416sw/337 (not included)
Battery Life : 15h
Net Weight : 0.8g
Interference : <2%
Sample Price: 65.0000
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Invisible Wireless Spy Earpiece
Building a talking poker timer

Pat James built this Arduino Talking Poker Timer to help keep his local poker tournament moving smoothly. He used an Arduino to run the thing, and a Voice Box Shield from Sparkfun to generate the speech. Source code and project writeup are available on his blog. [via practical arduino]
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Musician Uploads Video of Himself to YouTube 1000 Times

You know how when you repeat a word over and over it eventually begins to lose its meaning and sound like a foreign language? Or how a photocopy of a photocopy loses its details, until all that's left is abstract blobs of toner? Repetition and reproduction have been a key concern for many artists and theorists, from Walter Benjamin's seminal 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' to Alvin Lucier's performance entitled 'I Am Sitting in a Room' (1970), in which the artist recorded, played and re-recorded himself speaking until his speech became pure sound.
In homage to Lucier's work, musician Patrick Liddell (who records as Ontologist) took a modern approach to the problem (or benefit) of degradation. Liddell recorded a video of himself explaining how he would upload that very video over and over until his voice and image were destroyed. You can check out Liddell's first video after the break.
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Filed under: Audio/Video, Web
Musician Uploads Video of Himself to YouTube 1000 Times originally appeared on Switched on Fri, 04 Jun 2010 06:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Behind the Music: Tongues (Synopsis: They Are Gross) [Disgusting]
I'm sure USC's Speech Articulation group gained all manner of important phonological insight from these videos of an opera singer and a beatboxer doing their respective things in an MRI machine. Here's the insight I gained: tongues are gross. More
Qbo open source code robot runs on Linux OS

What's so special about the Qbo robot? Well, it runs on the Linux operating system and will offer open source code for avid programmers to take full advantage of it. Whenever it is about to run out of juice, it will head towards its autocharging docking station, similar to what current robotic vacuum cleaners do. Its head will feature a couple of omnidirectional and one unidirectional microphone, while a couple of high definition-capable webcams make up its eyes, complete with eyelids for that added touch of realism. Where're the tear ducts then, eh? 20 LEDs make up its mouth, while a solitary LED functions as its nose. It will be able to hook up to wireless networks thanks to integrated Wi-Fi b/g/n connectivity with Bluetooth support. It gets around on wheels, where some of its abilities include stereoscopic vision, a Speech Recognition System, Speech Synthesis System, API & Web control panel while the ability to avoid obstacles and pitfalls thanks to ultrasound sensors. No idea on pricing though, but it would be cool if it had a couple of arms to make it more useful around the home.
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Qbo open source code robot runs on Linux OS
Speech Recognition Isn’t Dead [Speech Recognition]
Robert Fortner's penned a fascinating post-mortem on speech recognition software. That's right, post-mortem. Because it's apparently very, very dead! Except that it's not. More
AffectPhone Project Can Convey Your Emotions Via Heat

Ever wonder how the person on the other side of the line is feeling? Is he angry, calm, or happy? If you’re not able to tell through his tone, the features of the AffectPhone project might help. What it can do is monitor the emotions of the person on the line, and convey the feeling to the recipient via heat or coolness. Of course, both parties would need to have the same setup, but if this were built into mobile phones in the future, customer service operators who get angry calls might end up with a lot of (literally) hot phones. Check out a video of it in action after the jump, though the speech is in Japanese.
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Lip reading mobiles are wunderbar, still at the prototype stage (video)
We came across this lip reading prototype during our exploration of the CeBIT 2010 halls, and while we're a bit tardy in bringing it to your attention, there's a certain timeless quality to strapping your face with wired sensors that transcends conventional restrictions of timeliness. That's our story anyway. Devised by researchers at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, it picks up the motion of speech (via electromyography) without requiring the sound, and then translates it into audible communication via a delightfully cold and robotic voice. The purposes of such a project are obvious -- from helping people who've lost their speech to making private telephone conversations actually private -- but the fun is in seeing someone use the thing in its current unrefined form. You'll be able to do that just past the break.
Continue reading Lip reading mobiles are wunderbar, still at the prototype stage (video)
Lip reading mobiles are wunderbar, still at the prototype stage (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 15 Mar 2010 09:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
Why making matters

AnnMarie Thomas gave a short talk at TED this year on Why Making Matters. She blogged the following, based on the speech she gave:
I truly believe that the one of the best ways to have an impact on the world is to give as many kids and young adults as possible the tools they need to change the world. In a quest to do this, I've read a lot of biographies of engineers and inventors whom I respected and began to see an obvious trend.
• Paul MacCready, one of my heroes, designer of human powered aircraft and champion for more sustainable modes of transformation, grew up building model airplanes on his family's ping pong table to the extent that at the age of 14 he set the world record for flight duration of an autogyro.
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Why making matters




Good politicians respond to criticism by engaging in a healthy dialogue with their disgruntled constituency. Pennsylvania Attorney General and Republican gubernatorial candidate Tom Corbett, on the other hand, responds by slapping a muzzle on Twitter accounts.
