Now speak on mobile without uttering a word?

First it was the invention of the wireless communication device. Now when that has flooded the planet and pollution of all kinds is scaling heights, a means of reducing noise pollution is in the pipeline. Very soon you can speak on your mobile phone without uttering a word and that too in any language. “Silent sounds”, the new technology was unveiled at the CeBIT fair on Tuesday that transforms lip movements into a computer-generated voice for the listener at the other end of the phone.

Electromyography is the phenomenon used by this device, developed by the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT),  monitoring tiny muscular movements that occur when we speak and converting them into electrical pulses that can then be turned into speech, without a sound uttered.

‘Silent Sound’ technology aims to notice every movements of the lips and transform them into sounds, which could help people who lose voices to speak, and allow people to make silent calls without bothering others. Rather than making any sounds, your handset would decipher the movements your mouth makes by measuring muscle activity, then convert this into speech that the person on the other end of the call can hear. So, basically, it reads your lips.

cebit_silent_sound_device

“We currently use electrodes which are glued to the skin. In the future, such electrodes might for example by incorporated into cellphones,” said Michael Wand, from the KIT.

The technology opens up a host of applications, from helping people who have lost their voice due to illness or accident to telling a trusted friend your PIN number over the phone without anyone eavesdropping — assuming no lip-readers are around.

The technology can also turn you into an instant polyglot. Because the electrical pulses are universal, they can be immediately transformed into the language of the user’s choice.

“Native speakers can silently utter a sentence in their language, and the receivers hear the translated sentence in their language. It appears as if the native speaker produced speech in a foreign language,” said Wand.

The translation technology works for languages like English, French and Gernan, but for languages like Chinese, where different tones can hold many different meanings, poses a problem, he added.

p_2462676Noisy people in your office? Not any more. “We are also working on technology to be used in an office environment,” the KIT scientist told AFP.

The engineers have got the device working to 99 percent efficiency, so the mechanical voice at the other end of the phone gets one word in 100 wrong, explained Wand.

“But we’re working to overcome the remaining technical difficulties. In five, maybe ten years, this will be useable, everyday technology,” he said.

image reference: http://www.telecomspace.com/files/cebit_silent_sound_device.jpg, http://fotosa.ru/stock_photo/image100/p_2462676.jpg,

Posted in Techno Buzz at May 19th, 2010. 2 Comments.

Buddy Home – Reminds me of Wall-E, grow fat and lazy

If you think my previous post Sixth Sense Technology was something that made you wonder how people can actually think so ahead, check this video out.

Luckily for me, my good friend, Shoban @shobankr from the TweetMyPC fame, who attended the TechED 2010 had a chance to meet Prasanna. He has literally gone a step further and implemented this in his own house.

It took me a while but then 2 minutes through the video, I just couldn’t take my eyes and ears off the video.

Shit I envy all these guys. Truly amazing.

Cheers!!!

Posted in Techno Buzz at April 15th, 2010. 1 Comment.

Sixth Sense Technology – Suggest you don’t miss this

When this video started and I heard this guy speak, I was like, he speaks funny. But a few minutes through the video, I was belittled by the kind of things this guy had done in his life and made me wonder how much he had contributed not only to technology but to mankind on the whole. This is one person we are talking about who has literally altered the life of 6 billion people and all the future generations.

Pranav Mistry, is a PhD student in the Fluid Interfaces Group at MIT’s Media Lab. Before his studies at MIT, he worked with Microsoft as a UX researcher; he’s a graduate of IIT. Mistry is passionate about integrating the digital informational experience with our real-world interactions.

At TEDIndia, Pranav Mistry demos several tools that help the physical world interact with the world of data — including a deep look at his SixthSense device and a new, paradigm-shifting paper “laptop.” In an onstage Q&A, Mistry says he’ll open-source the software behind SixthSense, to open its possibilities to all. Watch the video

This technology has finally been commercially implemented by BMW. Watch the video

Truly mind blowing. Hats off to you Pranav. Feel proud to be an indian.

Cheers!!!

Posted in Business, Techno Buzz at February 18th, 2010. 3 Comments.