gadgetPhreak Gadget News Blog. Futuristic Gadgets and Portable Electronics

November 20, 2006

Ingemi kicks out volume-constraining iHearSafe earbuds

Filed under: Headphones, buds, control, dap, earbuds, ihearsafe, ingemi, limiter, mp3, pmp, sound, volume — Darren Murph @ 4:52 am

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Listen up folks, while you might look mighty trendy rocking those headphones 24 / 7, you should be well aware by now that prolonged periods of heightened volumes can lead to embarrassing moments of near deafness in the future. While one (probably over concerned) citizen in Louisiana and a swarm of French folk both sued Apple for not providing volume limiters on its earbuds, your kid (or you, too) could be harmfully cranking it to eleven if your DAP doesn’t sport any kind of volume controlling functionality. Ingemi Corp. — where “kids comes first,” mind you — have unveiled the iHearSafe ‘buds which “have patent pending technology to keep the volume below 80 decibels,” regardless of how far you jam that volume knob or incensed you become. Featuring a standard 3.5-millimeter jack, the earbuds are reportedly compatible with any major MP3 player, but priced at just $24.99, we can’t imagine any sort of remarkable sound quality being emitted from these guys, quietly or otherwise.

[Via Techie Diva]

 

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December 31, 1969

Control your IR devices via SMS

Filed under: circuit, control, controller, infrared, ir, project, sms — Chris Ziegler @ 7:00 pm

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As the site clearly indicates, “The purpose of this circuit is to make the human life better and easier,” and we couldn’t agree more. If you’ve got an ancient Ericsson lying around that would otherwise be ready for the recycle bin, this circuit gives your faithful friend a new lease on life as an SMS-actuated IR sender capable of controlling up to eight devices, depending on how you opt to build it. A simple 8-digit text message to the phone is all it takes to send the appropriate ON or OFF signals, and as an added bonus, the author shows you how to wire the phone directly into the circuit so a battery’s no longer required. A better and easier human life, indeed.

[Via Make]

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