The finding suggests people could
use tiny speakers to effectively interfere with mosquito mating.
Not exact matches
The
tiny earpiece at the top of the phone that you
use to listen to phone conversations on now doubles as a
speaker when you play videos and games on your iPhone 7.
You can
use this
tiny yet powerful white noise machine with the included earbud headphones, your own headphones or with pillow
speakers.
It's much better than the
tiny mono
speaker I'm
used to when watching video on a tablet.
I'd spent several days in the basement
using ice cubes and candles to trim the tops and bottoms off of 100 wine bottles that would eventually amplify the sound of 100
tiny speakers — as usual, my process was messy and far from precise.
The team has come up with a way to
use a
tiny Raspberry Pi computer, hooked up to a
speaker and paired with an iBeacon to sense you approaching an area and playing your track of choice from Spotify.
It can be connected to audio systems over Bluetooth or with an audio cable, and with its
tiny built - in
speaker, can be
used as a smart alarm clock.
By contrast, the Erato Apollo 7
use a micro-sized dynamic driver — like a super
tiny version of the driver in your home
speakers or full - size headphones — and, therefore, the bass on these bad boys is very impressive.
We eluded to the wild world of electrostatic drivers in the intro, but let's do a crash - course review for those who aren't yet intimate with the technology: Most in - ear headphones
use one of two driver technologies: dynamic drivers, which are essentially micro-sized versions of the
speakers in your home, or balanced armature drivers, which are extremely
tiny tubes (armatures) wrapped in a voice coil that vibrates when electrified, again, creating sound.