[lug] Ethernet sound card - 2.4GHz link

John Dollison johndollison at hotmail.com
Fri Sep 13 15:06:59 MDT 2002


Here's a system that supposedly has higher fidelity because it uses a 2.4GHz
link:
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,21331,00.html

John


.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Mr Viggy" <LittleViggy at alum.manhattan.edu>
To: <lug at lug.boulder.co.us>
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2002 1:48 PM
Subject: Re: [lug] Ethernet sound card


Actually, the restrictions are not that crazy.  Take a look in the toy
section of any department store for a "sing along microphone."  These
broadcast at the low FM band.  You tune your radio to a specific
station, and your kid's voice comes out!

Also, take a look at those MP3 adapters.  They actually broadcast a low
power signal on the FM band, so you don't have to rip your car's radio
out to have an MP3 player in it.  I'm sure Radio Shack, or someone,
sells a similar gadget that has normal RCA inputs.

Viggy

Ben Luey wrote:
> Well, I don't have an ethernet outlet in my kitchen... so how about
> broadcasting a radio signal? I'd like to have my computer broadcast out
> from the soundcard (so again, whatever format) to a radio signal with a
> range of 20-30 ft, so any radio in my house can pick it up. Would this
> also fit the bill? I'm sure there are crazy FCC restrictions about
> broadcasting in a range that a normal radio could pick up, but it could be
> very low power...  and then internet radio over my normal radio.
>
> Ben
>
>
>
> On Thu, 5 Sep 2002, Mr Viggy wrote:
>
>
>>So, I don't get it...  What *are* you looking for?  It sounds like you
>>want some "adapter" that will take audio from your PC and play it on
>>your stereo.
>>
>>It sounds like you want really long RCA, or fiber cables...
>>
>>Viggy
>>
>>Peter Hutnick wrote:
>>
>>>Luke said:
>>>
>>>   Well these might not exactly be what you want, but both are relatively
>>>   the same. Basically they're just a piece of ram with power, Ethernet
>>>   connectivity and audio out (digital and analog). I know the Audiotron
>>>   can be controlled from a computer, and if all your music is on a Linux
>>>   system, you'll have to hack/tweek them some, so there's the added
'fun'
>>>   bonus.
>>>
>>>Alan said:
>>>
>>>   I have a Turtle Beach Auditron, and I love it.  Ethernet in, analog
and
>>>   digital audio out.
>>>
>>>This is specifically *not* what I am looking for.
>>>
>>>1. Only plays formats that it understands (this is the killer).
>>>2. Costs 4 or 5 TIMES what I think it would cost to make the "Ethernet
>>>sound card" (or to mass-produce them and sell 'em at a tidy profit).
>>>3. Relies on some sort of server software.  More specifically, it is a
>>>client, what I am driving at is a /peripheral/.
>>>
>>>They call it a "smart stereo component."  I am looking for a stupid
stereo
>>>component.
>>>
>>>-Peter
>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>>.
>>>
>>
>>
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>
>
> _______________________________________________
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> .
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