Skip to content

Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

Making WiFi Sound Like Dial-Up Internet

Uncategorized
1 1 0
  • Making WiFi Sound Like Dial-Up Internet

    Dial-up modems had a distinctive sound when connecting, with the glittering, screeching song becoming a familiar melody to those jumping online in the early days of the Internet. Modern digital connections don’t really have an analog to this, by virtue of being entirely digital. And yet, [Nick Bild] decided to make WiFi audible in a pleasing tribute to the modems of yore.

    The reason you could hear your dial-up modem is because it was actually communicating in audio over old-fashioned telephone lines. The initialization process happened at a low enough speed that you could hear individual sections of the handshake that sounded quite unique. Ultimately, though, once a connection was established at higher speed, particularly 33.6 k or 56 k, the sound of transmission became hard to discern from static.

    Modern communication methods like Ethernet, DSL, and WiFi all occur purely digitally — and in frequencies far above the audible range. Thus, you can’t really “listen” to a Wi-Fi signal any more than you can listen to the rays of light beaming out from the sun. However, [Nick] found an anachronistic way to make a sound out of WiFi signals that sounds vaguely reminiscent of old-school modems. He used a Raspberry Pi 3 equipped with a WiFi adapter, which sniffs network traffic, honing in on data going to one computer. The packet data is then sent to an Adafruit QT Py microcontroller, which uses the data to vary the amplitude of a sound wave that’s then fed to a speaker through a digital-to-analog converter. [Nick] notes this mostly just sounds like static, so he adds some adjustments to the amplitude and frequency to make it more reminiscent of old modem sounds, but it’s all still driven by the WiFi data itself.

    It’s basically WiFi driven synthesis, rather than listening to WiFi itself, but it’s a fun reference to the past. We’ve talked a lot about dial-up of late; from the advanced technology that made 56 k possible, to the downfall of AOL’s long-lived service. Video after the break.

    youtube.com/embed/OxAJHiVkBEM?…


    hackaday.com/2025/10/24/making…


Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
Post suggeriti
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    0 Views
    The Great ADS1115 Pricing and Sourcing MysteryThe AdaFruit ADS1115 board hooked up for testing. (Credit: James Bowman)Following up on the recent test of a set of purported ADS1115 ADCs sourced from Amazon [James Bowman] didn’t just test a genuine Ti part, but also dug into some of the questions that came up after the first article. As expected, the AdaFruit board featuring a presumed genuine Ti ADS1115 part performed very well, even performing significantly better on the tested parameters than the datasheet guarantees.Thus we can confirm that when you get the genuine Ti part, you can expect very good and reliable performance for your ADC purposes. Which leaves the unaddressed questions about what these cheapo Amazon-sourced ADS1115 ICs are, and how it can be that LCSC has what should be the same parts for so much cheaper than US distributors?As far as LCSC pricing is concerned, these are likely to be genuine parts, but also the subject of what is known as price discrimination. This involves pricing the same product differently depending on the targeted market segment, with e.g. Digikey customers assumed to be okay with paying more to get the brand name assurance and other assumed perks.Regarding the cheapo parts off Amazon, these could be QA failed parts, ‘third shift’ or other grey zone parts being sold for less, as well as outright fakes. The Analogy ADX111 for example is basically a drop-in clone of the ADS1115, down to parts of the datasheet, with the heading image showing a section to compare the two. Interestingly, the ADX111 is sold for $1.77 in 1,000 quantities on LCSC.Ultimately it’s hard to tell the true origin of the ‘ADS1115’ ICs on one of these cheap boards. They could have fallen off a genuine ADS1115 production line, be QA failed ADX111 parts or something else entirely. Without decapping a few samples and further in-depth research we’ll likely never know.Yet as some already commented, does it truly matter? You get the cheapo parts when you’re just screwing around with a prototype rather than splurging for the gold-plated AdaFruit version, and source from LCSC or Digikey when it’s time for PCBA. In the end everyone is happy, even without knowing whether it’s truly meat a Ti part that we’re using.hackaday.com/2025/10/24/the-gr…
  • Quando capisci che dovevi restare a letto.

    Uncategorized
    1
    0 Votes
    1 Posts
    0 Views
    Quando capisci che dovevi restare a letto.
  • you ever just wanna :knurling_gesture:

    Uncategorized
    4
    0 Votes
    4 Posts
    0 Views
    @aeva i'm not knurd enough for this
  • 0 Votes
    3 Posts
    0 Views
    @nantel @pluralistic it was great to see you!