BERIGAN Posted January 21, 2004 Report Posted January 21, 2004 great idea, eh???? Block your ears to hear better on Japan's new bone phone Tokyo January 21, 2004 3 greased pigs, Britney Spears, and Howard Dean..... Japanese telecom carriers, pioneers of internet-capable and picture-snapping handsets, have now come up with the world's first mobile phone that enables users to listen to calls inside their heads - by conducting sound through bone. The TS41 handset, manufactured by electronics firm Sanyo, was put on sale by the Tu-Ka mobile phone group this month, drawing healthy demand from customers who want to hear calls better in busy streets and other noisy places. The new phone is equipped with a "Sonic Speaker" which transmits sounds through vibrations that move from the skull to the cochlea in the inner ear, instead of relying on the usual method of sound hitting the outer eardrum. With the new handset, the key to better hearing in a noisy situation is to plug your ears to prevent outside noise from drowning out bone-conducted sounds. If the user holds the handset to the top of the head, the back of the head, cheekbone or jaw and plugs his or her left ear, the call will be heard internally on the left side. It is the first time that the bone conduction has been used in mobile phones although the technology has been available for fixed-line phones in Japan, mostly for elderly people, for the past two years. The Tu-Ka group has launched a major advertising campaign for the new mobile phone, featuring a young woman and a X-ray image of her skull using the handset. A spokesman at Tu-Ka Cellular Tokyo said it was too early to declare the TS41 a success, but retail store clerks said they were seeing a healthy demand for it. "We have lots of inquires from young women thanks to the television commercial," said Tomoyuki Harasawa, a sales consultant at a Bic Camera consumer electronics store in Yurakucho, central Tokyo. "The actual buyers are mostly businessmen in their 30s and 40s," Harasawa said. "We sell four to five TS41s a day, a good figure for Tu-Ka, which lags far behind rival mobile operators" such as DoCoMo and Vodafone. The mobile phone is priced at ¥7800 ($A95) each at the discount store. "I don't know if this is going to be a big hit, but it will be possible for Tu-Ka to raise its market share since this high-profile handset has improved its brand recognition among consumers," Harasawa said. Tu-Ka firms belong to Japan's second-largest telecom carrier, KDDI group. But Tu-Ka subscribers account for only a small percentage of the market, far less than the roughly 20 per cent for the "au" brand in the same KDDI group and the more than 50 per cent for industry leader DoCoMo. Customers who examined the new phone on the Bic Camera sales floor had mixed reactions. Masaya Iwata, a 31-year-old accountant, said the product was interesting but he was not sure if he would buy it because he uses his mobile less and less for talking. "I use my mobile for picture-taking and emailing rather than having conversations," he said. Japan's top mobile phone carrier NTT DoCoMo launched "i-mode" phones in February 1999, offering internet surfing, emailing and video watching on mobile handsets. And J-Phone, now rebranded Vodafone to underline that it is controlled by the British-based telecoms giant, launched picture-taking handsets in November 2000. Nearly every new mobile handset in Japan now has a built-in digital camera enabling users to send images taken with their mobiles via email to other handsets or computers. Tomohiro Abukawa, a 34-year-old hair stylist, said he liked the bone-conducting phone, noting railway stations and streets were often too noisy to talk. "I may get this as it is also small," he said. But one woman in her 20s said she found the phone "scary". "Isn't this bad for your health?" she asked. Another woman, in her 30s, said she was interested in the mobile phone but was self-conscious. "What troubles me is that I may look weird if I'm talking with the phone pressed between my eyebrows," she said. AFP Quote
Chrome Posted January 21, 2004 Report Posted January 21, 2004 I've got a hazy memory of a kind of radio that worked on the same priniciples that was sold maybe in the 1980s ... you kind of wore it around your neck like an untied scarf ... anyone else remember that? Quote
Man with the Golden Arm Posted January 21, 2004 Report Posted January 21, 2004 Cap Toys did this with lollipops a few years back. They really did work. It was a sucker holder / FM radio that transmitted the vibe through your teeth. I guess the louder you wanted it the more cavities you got. There is also a pen you can nibble on from Hasbro right now: Can't wait for a big ol' Multilayered Hybrid SACD Dagwood sammich! Quote
JSngry Posted January 21, 2004 Report Posted January 21, 2004 Just what I need - more voices in my head. Quote
Man with the Golden Arm Posted January 21, 2004 Report Posted January 21, 2004 You know if the body can transmit sound like this then someone, like say, ah, Hugh Grant, could strap on a big old pair of Grados, and then would....? Quote
rockefeller center Posted January 21, 2004 Report Posted January 21, 2004 Does it have Mintzer's "Mr. Fone Bone" as pre-set ring tone? Quote
BruceH Posted January 22, 2004 Report Posted January 22, 2004 Sterling Hayden: "Don't bone me!" Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted January 22, 2004 Report Posted January 22, 2004 This is "ancient" technology used by hearing aid professionals for years. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted January 22, 2004 Report Posted January 22, 2004 I'm pretty sure nobody "boned" Sterling Hayden. Quote
BruceH Posted January 22, 2004 Report Posted January 22, 2004 I don't know... Check out Asphalt Jungle: "He boned me in front of a stranger!" Quote
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