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Subject:Re: Sound damping in a cubicle From:"Gene Kim-Eng" <techwr -at- genek -dot- com> To:"Ned Bedinger" <doc -at- edwordsmith -dot- com> Date:Fri, 7 Mar 2008 16:40:45 -0800
Right. Imagine what the waves are like in that cubicle
after the sound comes out of the servers and bounces
around the place. It's one thing to read them at a point
relatively near your ears and then emit a cancellation
signal into your ears, but to generate cancellation that
would blanket the entire space and be effective at all
points within that space without earphones? It would
be a miracle.
Gene Kim-Eng
----- Original Message -----
From: "Ned Bedinger" <doc -at- edwordsmith -dot- com>
> Whoa. A wave shape is cancelled by the same shape 180 degrees out of
> phase. The electronic noise canceller, as I understand it, has to
> either synthesize the cancelling wave, or capture and re-emit the
> original sound at the cancelling phase. Theoretically, any audible
> wave shape, even if you vary attack, can be cancelled, assuming the
> canceller has the ability to reproduce it. But with a device like
> that, who'd put it in the office? Better to put it in the garage and
> play electric guitars through it :-)
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