CAR HORN PLAYS MP3
Automobiles are more like computers on wheels these days and the
technology you find underneath the hood now bears little resemblance
to the mechanical technology that moved our cars in the last
century. Gone are the carburetors that mixed the air and fuel, the
distributors and rotors that managed the electrical impulses to fire
the spark plugs are virtually nonexistent. The mechanical gears and
springs that made the speedometer, tachometer and other indicator
gauges have vanished, replaced by computer technology that does the
job a lot better by being far more accurate, visible and reliable.
Heck even the car key has become a computerized device offering a
lot more security as well as remote operability. Still there will
always be the nostalgic yearning for the older days when you still
had a chance of knowing what was going on when you popped the hood.
Nowadays, you need some pretty sophisticated diagnostic equipment in
order to make that determination.
Modern hybrid cars like Toyota's Prius are literally packed with
computer gear including screens that show when the driver is moving
on gasoline or electrical power. My friend recently purchased one of
these and I was intrigued with all of the vehicle's computer data
that you can now see on the dashboard's video monitor not to mention
watching the car's rear-view video camera. Other cars offer GPS
navigation with traffic updates as well as being able to pull up
what movies are playing in which theaters complete with show times,
where the cheapest gas can be purchased for the day, and then of
course there's music.
Automotive radios can lock onto satellite radio, pull in digital
information to show a song's title and artist, and even connect to
your mp3 player. But I just discovered a new automotive accessory
that too is designed to play mp3s but it doesn't play them inside
your car. It plays them outside your car because it's actually your
car's horn. That's right. Your car's horn has now become the
ultimate mp3 player and its called Horntones.
The Horntones FX-550 ($299.95) replaces your car's horn with a three
piece system. There's the audio horn itself, a special amplifier and
the control display player unit that sits inside your car. The
player is the heart of the system and has 256 megabytes of flash
(nonvolatile) computer memory.
It sports a backlit blue LCD display that will show you the mp3
sound that is about to play when you press any of the nine preset
buttons to which you can assign an mp3 file.
Out of the box, the Horntones comes factory programmed with 27 tones
divided into three preset themes. A theme lets you save a set of 9
tones per theme name. So for example, you could have an Animals
theme with an elephant trumpeting, a jackass braying, a dog barking,
you get the idea.
Of course, since this is an mp3 player with lots of memory, you can
add other sounds too. The way this ability works is via the
Internet. You surf on over to the Horntones website where you set up
your own virtual player.
There you will see a replica of your Horntones player and screen.
You can choose from a large library of sounds and themes or assemble
the sounds you want into your own theme. You can even upload any mp3
file you have to be converted into a horn sound. To do so, you must
first go to the Horntones store and purchase Tone Credits in groups
of 10 for $10, 20 for $20 or 50 for $40. New tones require 1 credit
each for processing. Once you have programmed your virtual player to
how you want the sounds configured and assigned them to the buttons,
you download the file and then offload it to any standard USB flash
drive. Finally you insert the flash drive into the player's USB port
and transfer the file. You can now blast any sound to the horn as
well as select any themes you may have created to switch button
sound sets.
So what was once the simple horn that you pressed to get a driver's
attention has now too become a computer component and depending on
the sound you choose at the moment, you're probably going to get a
lot more attention as well.
www.horntones.com
| Craig Crossman is
a McClatchy-Tribune newspaper columnist writing about computers and
technology. He also hosts the nation's longest running nationally syndicated radio talk show on
computers and technology, Computer America, heard on both the Business TalkRadio
Network® and the Lifestyle TalkRadio Network®, weeknights at 10PM Eastern
time. Visit his website at http://www.computeramerica.com |
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