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zharknado | 8 months ago

Brainstorming applications of knowing your angle relative to a point source:

- adaptive sports for visually impaired players like beep baseball?

- robot swarm members knowing their relative 2d position with a single microphone? (frequency for angle, amplitude for distance)

- a cheap, durable way for human workers to track the rotation cadence of slowly rotating machinery?

discuss

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wahern|8 months ago

Reminds me of Ben Underwood, the blind kid who used echo location around the house, playing basketball, riding his bike around the neighborhood, etc: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnH7AIwhpik https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_echolocation#Ben_Underwo...

literalAardvark|8 months ago

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_echolocation

Bloody hell, I can't do all that...

I wonder how they discovered that "clicking" works, seems so counterintuitive to discover. Though it's fair that I don't spend anywhere near that much time listening carefully and noticing how sharp sounds reflect.

xattt|8 months ago

Before practical applications, my first thought was a grade-school science fair entry. It’s novel enough for judges not to have seen it for a couple of years.