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Back to school - with the phone call your teacher can't hear
Students have always tried to best their teachers in the small-scale warfare that is school, and now they have biology and technology on their side - at least where mobile phones are concerned. The psycho ringtone has arrived in Austria.
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Mosquito device considered to tackle rowdy youths
AN ULTRASONIC device that deters teenagers with a high-pitched noise is being considered for a site in Yate plagued with anti-social behaviour.
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One Device Tracks Gunshots; Another Stops Teens from Loitering
Richland County deputies have unveilved two new high-tech devices which they say should help to combat and reduce crime.
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Latest bid to fight bad behaviour
The Richland County Sheriff’s Department is putting two pieces of technology in the field to detect gunshots and disperse young loiterers without the presence of deputies.
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Latest bid to fight bad behaviour
UNRULY teenagers are making the lives of people in Berkeley a misery according to residents. Frustrated residents claim criminal damage, noise, speeding and underage drinking are all becoming a common scene late at night in Berkeley town centre. The public toilets on Marybrook Street are also believed to be used for suspected drug abuse and sex acts.
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'Mosquito' deserves try
A recent letter writer was correct with his statement that the Mosquito ultrasonic teen repellent operates at 80 to 90 dB and emits a frequency of 18 kHz. This was an obvious miscommunication.
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Town turns to a teenage repellent
The mosquito device has been put up at the Willows Arts Centre in George Street
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Top App Award 2006
Why it's a top app: A mobile phone craze that started in the U.K. and quickly spread to the U.S. A ringtone that became ubiquitous almost overnight. A memorable brand based on an annoying animal. Sound like Crazy Frog? Forget it, this could be onto something even bigger. When Welsh company Compound Security Systems unveiled their ultrasonic youth deterrent systems last year, no one expected that the 17-kilohertz technology would be pirated and repurposed—as a ringtone that is inaudible to adult ears. Compound Security caught on to the trend and tried to monetize the tone—first as the “Mosquitotone” and later as the “Official Mozzytone.” But it was too late; school kids on both sides of the pond were already designing, uploading and using their own versions of the pirated tone. As silly as it may seem, the Mozzytone does represent a shift in the industry—toward user-generated content—and cracks are already starting to show in the armor of the traditional ringtone sales model (revenues are down, for one). When you frame it in that light, it’s not hard to see (but maybe hard to hear) what all the buzz is about.

Author -
Publication Top Mobile Applications Award 2006
Date 28 September 2006
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