Wireless Power Consortium Pushes For Standard 221
Slatterz writes "We've already heard about wireless power before, but now we're a step closer to throwing away our power cables and chargers. A consortium of eight companies has launched an
initiative to develop a wireless power standard. The drive was announced at the first Wireless Power Consortium conference at the Hong Kong Science Park yesterday. Most consumer electronic devices require a different charger, and the resulting tangle of wires and bulky devices is 'ugly, frustrating and inconvenient to use,' the group said. 'Wireless power charging takes away the need for wires and connectors. You simply drop your mobile phone, game device, electric shaver on the charging station and the battery is recharged,' explained Satoru Nishimura, senior manager at Sanyo."
But... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:But... (Score:5, Informative)
The Wikipedia article [wikipedia.org] talks about efficiencies between 40% and 80% for near field transmission. Indeed, that seems like a serious waste just for the convenience of not having to plug in your device...
FYI, far field transmissions using microwave can reach an efficiency of 95%, but I don't think you want such a beam in your house :-)
Re: (Score:2)
But... With one way to charge your stuff you may be able to get a better quality one. Those AC to DC converters take power even when they are not charging anything. If you make a nice near field transmission system. With say with a physical on off switch or a weight activated switch you can save power from having all those AC DC plugged in (unplugging them when they are not in use is really to much of a hassle for some locations to even consider making people switch).
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
How exactly does the power go from AC in the wall to the near field without going through a DC converter? How do you ensure that is not just sucking power out of the wall?
Re: (Score:2)
Why can't you do that with a wall-wart? And there's the additional problem with wireless power of figuring out when all the devices are finished charging so that you can shut off, or (better yet) how to know when to shut on when a new device (with no power to signal the base station) needs it to shut on.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
What if it turns on for a very short interval every so often and detects whether there is a power drain. The change in the drop in voltage across the unit gives a clue as to the state of need. Essentially it becomes a sampling frequency and threshold decision problem.
Transformers are efficient (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't this "wireless power" stuff just a terrible waste of energy?
Transformers (not the Hasbro sort) are basically two adjacent coils, with the difference in the number of windings on each side determining the voltage step-up or step-down.
Here you have what is basically a transformer, just with the coils moved further away from each other. A 1:1 step ratio in a transformer is pretty efficient.
You're not wasting electricity spraying electrons in the air like a water sprinkler, there has to be a circuit before potential can be moved from one coil to the other. Electronics can keep idle current to a minimum. Where's the problem?
Re:Transformers are efficient (Score:5, Interesting)
Many people leave their charging transformers plugged in, even when not charging their appliance.
Since most of these chargers are cheap, they are not only highly inefficient when charging (how hot does your laptop power supply get?), but also consume power when not doing anything useful.
Would need to factor these things in to properly judge efficiency of near-field charging, which can get above 80% if I remember correctly...
Re: (Score:2)
"these chargers are cheap" - you nailed it.
Do you think this wireless charger will be cheap? How about we mandate a standard size plug and smarter chargers instead? You'd need less chargers so they wouldn't cost more overall.
And ... if we made the connector a decent one we wouldn't be fiddling around with all those stupid, fragile microscopic connectors the 'phone people are foisting on us.
If you want to save the planet, let's start making things that last.
Re: (Score:2)
A coil of wire is pretty cheap, so yes it would be cheap.
They arent extremely complicated devices.
Re: (Score:2)
Flux loss.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Transformers are efficient (Score:4, Interesting)
Umm, no let's not plug it in.
In time this can be improved above 80% efficiency. It's not about "may as well plug it in", it's also about space constraints, plugs, etc. This can remove the need for a lot of wiring and is not a new technology by far.
People have used mice [a4tech.com] (not the animals) to do this for years.
Not to mention this could force standardizing of connections thus disabling companies from having proprietary connectors to connect things.
Shaver's plug gets bust? Would be nice to replace the plug and not the whole damn thing, etc. This bypasses that entirely.
Re:Transformers are efficient (Score:5, Insightful)
Shaver's plug gets bust? Would be nice to replace the plug and not the whole damn thing, etc. This bypasses that entirely.
Sure. Let's just use this other power adapter from something else. With a little extra force, see, it fits fine. OK, now just to plug it in...
BLAMMO!!!!
Wife comes running in and sees the disaster and, being a good American, calls a lawyer.
This is why power adapters of different voltages, different capacities and different functionalities are designed with unique connectors. The intent is to keep you from causing problems for the company via lawsuits. Lawsuits caused directly by your ability to connect two mismatched devices together. Unless this risk can be eliminated, you are not going to get rid of every device having a different and unique connector.
Now it might be nice if there was an ISO standard for connectors (like there is for mains power connections) so there would be a few thousand "standard" connectors for every given voltage, regulation mode, current and AC or DC variety. This would solve everyone's problem, wouldn't it? Until you attempt to get everyone behind the idea of the few thousand "standard" connectors. That are all unique and different from today's non-standard connectors.
Re: (Score:2)
Some manufacturers ship an N volt DC tip-positive adaptor with a million different incompatible ends just so that they can make money on new adaptors. :(
Re: (Score:2)
If that were the real reason, the'd be a 1:1 correspondence between the physical shape of the plug and the voltage - and don't forget the polarity. I know from devices I've owned that it isn't so.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Two Coils joined with a Core. No Core, and the efficiency goes way down
That depends on the frequency of the AC voltage/current. At lower frequencies, an iron core is needed to help concentrate and focus the electromagnetic field due to the extremely-long wavelengths involved. Higher frequencies not so much. At the right frequency, a conductive loop an inch or so in diameter in the charger and the device under charge would be plenty to transfer power at surprisingly-high efficiencies depending on the range r
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Unfortunately, 400 hertz is about the optimum frequency for inductive loads to be as efficient without a core as a 60 hertz inductive load is with a core.
Better tell that to all the radio transmitter designers that use nothing more than two coils in proximity to each other to couple many watts of power from the transmitters' plate-tank circuit to the load.
And then there is the whole thing about the established power grid running at 50 to 60 hertz
Switching power supplies are ubiquitous these days and could b
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Hold the phone, let me call my friends at MIT and let them know that their wireless chargers are hopeless, because they don't have a core.
*facepalm* [flickr.com]...air is still a core. And the effect is diminished with large coils, like these people are using. And smaller distances, which is the case with cell phones. I'm pretty sure the engineers at MIT have figured this stuff out.
Re: (Score:2)
They're talking about a near-contact charging station. That can be pretty efficient -- as others pointed out, a transformer can be VERY efficient and this is basically the same thing.
Note that it's distinct from the charge-your-laptop-across-the-room style of wireless power, which IS very inefficient.
Re: (Score:2)
Note that it's distinct from the charge-your-laptop-across-the-room style of wireless power, which IS very inefficient.
Anything topical or substantial available from old notes on Wardenclyffe? I mean the Tesla notes, not the liner notes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wardenclyffe_Tower/ [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
I doubt it. This style of charging station is just a transformer except that the two halves are in different cases.
Wardenclyffe Tower was designed basically as a radio transmission tower. It was supposed to demonstrate transmission of electricity over long distances through the air, which is exactly what radio transmitters do. For an example of widespread deployment, find one of those little transistor radios that can power themselves from the received radio signal.
Re: (Score:2)
As I understand it, the place had a bunch of purposes, but the one you're referring to was the one he pitched to investors: draining power out of the ionosphere (not charging it). The power was supposed to be basically free, and his investors didn't really see much investment potential in that, so they backed out and Tesla had to give up on that experiment.
Radio waves DO interact with the atmosphere. The only reason long range radio works is that radio waves in certain frequency bands reflect off the iono
Re:But... (Score:5, Interesting)
There are other advantages.
Re: (Score:2)
...then you would fry your balls. Not that it matters here on /., but still, you could also fry your brains if you were to lie down on your couch.
Not a good idea...
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Steve Jobs was supposed to announce it at Macworld. Unfortately, we've had some problems with the mass production of them. He may have to drop out of giving the keynote if we cannot solve the problem.
Edit: Apparently Steve decided to cancel for the keynote.
Re:But... (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, MIT has managed to produce wireless power at 75% and even 90% efficiency, either of which would be more efficient than your laptop's power pack. [cnn.com]
Re:But... (Score:5, Funny)
FTA: 90% efficiency when three feet apart?
I've got a cold fusion rector you might be interested in...
Re:But... (Score:5, Interesting)
The perfect use for this, in my mind, would be to have it built into your PC case. PC case sits under your desk, and monitors, mouse, keyboard, speakers are all just free standing. Awesome for LAN parties (assuming separate power transmitters don't interfere with each other), the worst thing about moving a computer (or even having one set up somewhere) is the spaghetti nest of wires tying it together. Of course, I'd probably duct-tape some tinfoil lining into my lucky rocketship underpants...
As for efficiency, I'd presume that the efficiency they're talking about is just that of the wireless transmission. There'd be a transformer at each side to get the voltages correct so it's still going to be less efficient overall than your power brick. A more apt comparison would be the 90% @ 3 feet compared to the power loss over the wires from the power brick to the device.
Re: (Score:2)
Hell, I'd settle for them just standardizing wired DC plugs so I don't have to pay $80 for a new one.
Why not just make everything 12V (like it seems everything is now) and have each device with some kind of microchip that tells it what amperage to feed it? Then you could just buy a bunch of power plugs and use them for any of your gadgets.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
I cant think of a single smart phone that doesn't use mini-usb to charge. Hell even my no name brand bluetooth headset uses mini-usb. USB 3.0 (i know im starting to sound like an intel sales guy at this point) is supposed to push something like 2 amps over usb, as opposed to .5 currently.
Re: (Score:2)
If you count the Nokia phones as smartphones (N95), they won't charge via USB.
It's why I went to the iPhone 3G.
Re: (Score:2)
Exercise some care when using power supplies rated at much higher currents than your device. Some DC converter designs will ramp up in voltage if the current draw is too low (computer power supplies do this actually). This is of course more of a problem when you're trying to use something like a switching supply rated for 10A on a device that draws 100mA maximum.
Re: (Score:2)
Is that an intentional decision or a faulty implementation?
6V is 6V. If the resistance of the device is such that only 100mA flow at 6V, why should the power supply start putting 12V accross it? I thought the current rating on a power supply is supposed to be the maximum it can deliver.
Re: (Score:2)
When you consider that the coils they're using are ~3 feet in diameter, that number doesn't seem so odd. The efficiency of inductive coupling is roughly proportional to (diameter/distance)**3 assuming the coils are well matched, the frequency is ideal and a few other things. Anyway, with reasonable sized coils for a small portable device the effective range drops to a few inches (laptop) to under an inch (cellphone).
Re: (Score:2)
Don't buy it, it's just a bunch of gillette razors in a beer cooler wired to a car battery.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Just don't put it under your desk for very long, or your boys won't swim anymore.
Re: (Score:2)
yes .... but they would glow !!
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, yes and no. The laptop power adapter changes AC line voltage to some DC voltage, which the computer the uses. It's a single conversion step.
Now consider wireless power. It isn't going to be coming like some aether from the walls - you're going to need to produce it somewhere, somehow, probably from AC line voltage via a, you guessed it, power adapter. So the 75% to 90% wireless transmission efficiency is on top of the efficiency of the pow
Re: (Score:2)
Let do some simple math:
In order to be useful, you'll have this thing attached to the USB port of your PC or from a wall wart. Trust me, it save so much UL/EU testing if you are not plugging into an AC outlet.
Anyone that tells me they can do direct AC wall outlet conversion to RF at 90% efficiency is lying.
Power From Electric outlet -> DC @ 80% efficiency
Wireless power at 75% -> 90% efficiency
80% x 75% = 60%
80% x 90% = 72%
Guys... In case you don't know, we should be saving power... So throwing away power so that you can avoid a power cord that is close to 100% efficient for power transfer DOES NOT make sense.
You can save a hell of a lot more energy by using switched-mode power supplies.
Why not just standardize the cables? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Not to fear. The invisible rotting penis of the market will come along eventually and sort it all out.
Re: (Score:2)
The cost of these things is around $2 today. It has almost nothing to do with making money off sales of adapters and EVERYTHING to do with people plugging the wrong adapter into some device.
You connect an 18 volt adapter to a cell phone and it fries the phone. You connect a 5 volt adapter to a notebook and it either does nothing or fries the adapter. In either case, there is a potential for fires and other liabilities. Just having it not work is enough for most manufacturers. You give people something
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Why not just standardize the cables? (Score:5, Informative)
Wireless power is only practical in short ranges anyway. With standardized cables I wouldn't have drawerfuls of power cables.
Which is precisely what they're aiming for.
A standardized cable isn't gonna help you much when your mobile phone takes 5 volts to charge and your shaver or laptop takes 9 to 18. I imagine the technology would mimic proximity cards, you'd have a flat surface (say, a tabletop) and you'd sit your PDA, mobile, laptop, portable game system, etc. on it and depending on the number of windings in the receiving device and a small rectifier circuit, it would automatically receive the proper voltage.
AC electricity is fun.
Re: (Score:2)
A standardized cable isn't gonna help you much when your mobile phone takes 5 volts to charge and your shaver or laptop takes 9 to 18.
You know, if we were standardizing cables, there's absolutely no reason we can't create a very simple, low-power protocol for a multi-voltage transformer to query what kind of power a device needs. And there'd be no issues with trying to create a one size fits all solution for broadcasting power if you had a straight line between the power server and client.
Re: (Score:2)
You know, if we were standardizing cables, there's absolutely no reason we can't create a very simple, low-power protocol for a multi-voltage transformer to query what kind of power a device needs.
Wouldn't it be simpler to pick 24v or whatever as the standard and just have each device contain a voltage regulator that takes it down to the appropriate voltage? I have to imagine that would be cheaper than an intelligent multi-voltage system.
Re: (Score:2)
Probably. Electronics is not an area of expertise for me, I'll admit. I knew enough to realize that you didn't need wireless to get those advantages but not enough to think about an even more practical solution. Thanks for pointing that out.
Re: (Score:2)
Why is wireless better than a standardized docking station?
Seems to me a docking station would always be cheaper AND more efficient than a wireless setup.
The only difference to the user would be that you have to line it up neatly when you lay it on the charging pad. Would that inconvenience anybody?
Re: (Score:2)
Why is wireless better than a standardized docking station?
Seems to me a docking station would always be cheaper AND more efficient than a wireless setup.
The only difference to the user would be that you have to line it up neatly when you lay it on the charging pad. Would that inconvenience anybody?
Come home after ten-plus hours on the job and see how enthusiastic you are about lining up your pocket fodder. I just empty my pockets onto the little table next to the door. It would be real nifty if that's all I have to do to make sure they're fully charged for the next day. One less thing I need to worry about.
As for cheap, all this would be is a coil under the surface... half of a transformer. Not too pricey and a whole lot more convenient than juggling a pile of wires.
I'd suggest tinfoil underpants... (Score:5, Funny)
...but that might not be such a good idea.
Yeah... (Score:4, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Like your family jewels do better in a microwave without tinfoil.
Re: (Score:2)
Of course, he's one of the Micronuts!
Re: (Score:2)
Mid Range Wireless (Score:2, Insightful)
If you can get wireless power in an entire room then we can finally ditch the last cord to our laptops, which is what consumers are waiting for when they ask for wireless power. If you have to put the items on a tray, it is a little easier, but it might as well be a dock or a physical connection. If you have power to an entire r
Re:Mid Range Wireless (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
putting your laptop on top of the charger would probably scramble the hard drive.
With SSD that won't be a problem.
Re: (Score:2)
Well, not quite.
The coils are designed grab a charge and pull it to it.
It's not like an explosion where the power simply radiates everywhere. That's what we have microwaves for and why they are shielded. If the SSD is in the path of the charge, it would be impacted by it (shielded or not), but otherwise it's not like this will go everywhere for short range. The electricity leaps towards the coils, essentially.
Long range is another game entirely, though.
Re: (Score:2)
Sod your stupid cell phone and laptop! This would be super awesome for my toy helicopter!
Re:Mid Range Wireless (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem with trying to power your wireless devices anywhere in a room is similar, due to the fact that you can move around and change the orientation of your devices. As the ratio of power-receiving-antenna to "cage" is even lower, you are likely looking at even lower power efficiencies. Yes, you can perform all sorts of fractal antenna optimizations and the like, but, if you want to be able to receive power anywhere in the room, then you are limited by the laws of physics: If your powering system covers the whole room, your efficiency is limited by the simple ratio of the area of your receiving antenna in the plane parallel to the floor (or wherever you place your powering system) to the area of the powering antenna itself.
The recent demos of wireless power by Intel and others have all involved highly directed powering antennae, where moving the receiver even a small amount cuts off the power supply. Directed power does have its uses, however. Imagine medical implants that can be powered in a short time by placing a directed antenna on your skin each morning, or even wearing a battery pack on your belt with a directed antenna to power a device with a built in radio communicator. No (highly infectable) wires penetrate the skin, no surgery is necessary to replace batteries that run low, and, even in the worst cases, you should still be able to remove the battery back for a time to perform certain functions (exercising, bathing) without losing device functionality.
Re: (Score:2)
It will never happen in the United States, mainly because a huge group of attorneys will be standing by, eagerly rubbing their hands and waiting for the first group of plaintiffs who will claim that midrange wireless power systems are responsible for headaches, arthritis, brain cancer, birth defects, leukemia, high blood pressure, etc.
Has everyone forgotten th
"Cancer" tag (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Of course it could. Would it? Almost certainly not. Yes, if you were spraying around gamma rays then you would definitely cause some cancer. Wireless power doesn't do that - it uses far lower frequencies.
Put it this way - see that lightbulb? It's spraying around watts of much higher frequency radiation than any consumer wireless device would.
Re: (Score:2)
Put it this way - see that lightbulb? It's spraying around watts of much higher frequency radiation than any consumer wireless device would.
That's true, and look how sensitive the electrons in our eyes are to it. It's like saying that microwaves can't be seen (they're at a much lower frequency than our eyes detect), therefore they can't hurt us. Good luck with *that*.
Re: (Score:2)
I didn't say they couldn't HURT us, I said it was very unlikely they'd cause cancer. It's trivial to demonstrate that radio waves can hurt you. Cram a screwdriver in the door sensor on your microwave, stand in front of it and turn it on.
You don't worry about lightbulbs causing eye cancer, do you? If so, perhaps you should be careful about looking at your computer screen.
Re: (Score:2)
As I understand it, no it isn't going to cause cancer. This isn't radiation flying about the room, not even in the sense of EM radiation like microwaves. These systems use an alternating magnetic current that produces a sympithetic current in the device being charged. Rather than sending power in the EM spectrum and generating a current based on a photovoltaic effect.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
All studies point to "Not likely" which is doctor parlance for "No, but we don't want you to get cancer from some other source and then blame us"
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, when designing this standard, scientists and engineers are going to cherry-pick frequencies likely to give you cancer.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Ideally, bugs like cancer-causing levels of radiation will be worked out before it goes into production.
I sure hope so, but some things can easily slip by quality control, and I would think this could be easier in wireless development due to possible difficulties in testing, and a lack of knowing "exactly" what causes cancer in the first place.
And it is also scary how quality control's quality itself seems to be decreasing [slashdot.org] drastically [thecoffeedesk.com].
Re: (Score:2)
From what I remember from basic physics, when you look at EM radiation, you get both an electric and magnetic field component. You can't have one without the other.
Electromagnetic Radiation [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:2)
I am not an expert to answer, but I think most people's fears about wireless power causing caner are misguided. The power is not sent electrically through the air, not is it transmitted through gamma rays or any other radio waves. It is a high frequency alternating magnetic field. Magnetic fields alone have been shown to have no negative affects on living organisms. Besides, I'm pretty sure if this thing is really dangerous, someone will find out before there is one in your home, so I wouldn't worry too much about it.
Your high frequency magnetic field is actually an electromagnetic field, which is exactly the same stuff as gamma waves and radio waves.
damage? (Score:2, Interesting)
How about my electric car? (Score:3, Interesting)
Standard power cable? You mean USB? (Score:2)
Last I checked USB was pretty much the defacto standard power connector already, for low power devices. And you can make a nice looking USB charging dock for SUB a lot more cheaply than you can make these space-wasting power pads.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Standards Requires Standard Technology (Score:5, Informative)
You can't develop a standard if you don't have similar technologies, and wireless power developers so far have been coming up with all kinds of different technologies. Remove the part of TFA that makes no sense in light of this, and you end up with an advertisement for this "consortium" disguised as a press release, faithfully and unquestioningly reproduced by PC Authority. Had PC Authority tried to do real journalism rather than simple reproduction, they'd have found that not only are the major proposed schemes so different that the idea of standardization is ridiculous, but that some of the members of the consortium aren't even developing any of those schemes.
Re: (Score:2)
What could possibly go wrong? (Score:5, Funny)
Intel chief technology officer Justin Rattner demonstrated a Wireless Energy Resonant Link [today.com] as he spoke at the annual Intel developers forum in San Francisco yesterday.
Rattner demonstrated this by causing his ears to light up at 60 watts of power a yard from a power transmitter operated by his assistant Igor. Only four journalists were incinerated when the power earthed through them from his fingertips.
Rattner reassured us that pumping kilowatts of power around the home through magnetic induction power is absolutely harmless. "The human body is not affected by magnetic fields," he said as one journalist with a pacemaker collapsed and another with a knee replacement watched his leg catch fire. "There's no danger whatsoever from it, any more than there is from mobile phones cooking your brain, microwave leakage blinding you, chemical waste unraveling all the DNA in your balls or statistical clusters of kids with cancer wherever high-tension power lines run overhead. Asbestos and thalidomide were horribly slandered in their day too."
"Of course, Nikola Tesla did it first in 1899," said enthusiast Albert Tedious-Anorak, 54, of Little Boring. "I detailed this at length on Wikipedia, but they refused to believe the value of my revelations on this matter due to a conspiracy of Edison fans amongst the site administrators."
Re: (Score:2)
oral B (Score:2)
I wish my toothbrush did this
Good. About time. (Score:2)
It's about the right time to do this. There have been about three competing schemes for smart inductive wireless charging, none of which got any traction. This needs to be standardized, preferably worldwide.
If this works, every business hotel will have a convenient charging pad in every room. We might see charging pads built into cars.
The problem is "requires different chargers." (Score:2)
The problem is "requires different chargers," so the obvious solution is to standardize the voltage requirements of electronic devices so that they don't need to use different chargers.
Why are the silly chargers able to plug into the same outlet in the first place? Not because of any physical constant of the universe, but because the market decided that the advantages of standardization outweighed whatever subtle optimization there might have be in (say) running lights at 120 volts DC, vacuum cleaners at 85
Scared, paranoid? (Score:2)
While I am a true geek and nerd and whatever else (having 5x more networked devices than the average Joe), I am just SCARED of this idea.
I have cell phones and wireless access points (which I keep FAR away from my pregnant wife and will keep away from the young man), I DEFINITELY deny using a microwave oven unless absolutely unavoidable (once a month?). No I do not have air purifiers and spray "kill 99% germs" shit all around the house, and better have my kids play with my dogs' shit other than operate a mi
Re: (Score:2)
I have cell phones and wireless access points (which I keep FAR away from my pregnant wife and will keep away from the young man), I DEFINITELY deny using a microwave oven unless absolutely unavoidable (once a month?). No I do not have air purifiers and spray "kill 99% germs" shit all around the house, and better have my kids play with my dogs' shit other than operate a microwave oven, I think that wireless power is something I definitely something I want to keep away from: young souls, pregnant women and m
Re:Scared, paranoid? (Score:4, Insightful)
I work in a 3 Tesla fMRI environment. You know, the thing with the superconductive, super cooled magnets that require a few kV to maintain and that eventually has enough power to align all water molecules in your body and then send another magnetic field through to take pictures of your physical structure. You know if your head needs to be scanned, we put it inside a head coil which is basically the secondary coil side of a transformer. I usually work on the computers right next to the power boxes (huge cabinets with transformers in them).
So far, fMRI has produced no cancers in me, the fMRI specialist who worked in fMRI for the last 20 years and is next to the machine on a daily basis, the technicians that maintain it or any of the subjects (except for the ones already having cancer or in which they induced cancer to study). Also, fMRI has no reported effects on pregnancy although we won't allow it because of the electricity that can be induced in the body but the main reason would be the contrast fluids.
I don't believe your mW sender/receiver has enough power to harm let alone kill anyone.
Seriously? Who are those idiots? (Score:2)
I expected it to be obvious for slashdotters, that a high energy beam, going from A to B, has to go trough material X.
Now if material X happens to be something that reacts to masses of electrons or photons going trough it, it will change, and most likely heat that material, depending on its density.
So if you're part of the material X, it is pretty sure that you will be fried. If your brain is, it will distort the electric charges even at much lower power levels.
So who are those idiots that still praise it a
What about the power supply powering the wireless (Score:2)
With todays technology it is perfectly possible to standardize on one plug, that has an extra 2 pins to communicate what power it needs. A transformer that uses that technology only sees a couple of dollars price increase. Everyone wants this
Re: (Score:2)
There are two actual motivations:
- Being able to charge $40 for a hunk of plastic and metal bits worth 50 cents is a nice pool of free money
- Not having to replace your customer's expensive devices after they fry them with a charger they bought at radio shack for 40 cents and don't admit it, is already worth more than negative $39.60
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Actually, cords are a pain for portable gear. Plugging and unplugging, and moving them is very hard on them. I go through a laptop power cord about once a year. They all wear out right where the wire enters the connector on the laptop side. For cell phones, the connectors themselves often break, get dirty or otherwise damaged. Irritating when it happens to the cord. Worse when it happens to the phone.
Other than using a heavier cord, or a heavy support mesh, there's not really much that can be done abo
Re: (Score:2)
A "smart" power adapter that could output the proper voltage and current (not too much, not too little) for any possible consumer device would probably cost more than 100 "dumb" power adapters. Since your average human has less than 50 (probably less than 10), this would reflect a significant cost increase. Not only that, but more than one would be required - ever want to charge your cell phone and your iPod at the same time?
The primary obstacle has been every manufacturer building their device to accept
Re: (Score:2)
A) Locking your door and not giving the neighbors a key, recommend an "alarm" (or alarm-like) system for optimal security
B) Preventing the neighbors from staying in your home, in the same room as the device charger for extended periods of time, especially while their chargeable device is visible
C) Do not place the wireless charger next to any outside walls, or next to any guest room walls
D) pro
Re: (Score:2)
Please go back to 4chan's
I'm all for black comedy, but stick a disclaimer in there somewhere so no 12 year old causes a national suit, because I don't want to have to fall back on Digg, or having to find my own tech articles
Or maybe this is just a more modern trolling attempt, sorry to act new here in that case.
Re: (Score:2)
Sigh, I give up. No more feeding the trolls. Slashdot will forever be tainted by both trolls and troll clones alike. Take it, its yours