海角大神

Microsoft, the manner police

For those people too rude or forgetful to silence cellphones during a movie, Microsoft wants to shush them for you. It has on a new scheme to nanny your gadgets.

Theaters that don鈥檛 want any interruptions could use the system to automatically set phones to vibrate mode. Museums could wirelessly stop cameras from taking pictures of their artwork. Gated communities could digitally prohibit cars from breaking the speed limit.

Microsoft鈥檚 patent application suggests that such 鈥,鈥 or DMP, will use radio frequencies, like those found in an EZPass or clothing alarm tags, to enforce the rules. A museum, for example, would set up little radio beacons around the building. The signals will alert your devices about what鈥檚 OK and what鈥檚 a no-no. Compatible devices would then lock down the outlawed functions until you leave the signal area, at which time all your normal features will be restored.

Don鈥檛 expect DMP any time soon; this is only a patent filing after all. For the Microsoft system to work, it would require the company to convince both building owners and device-makers that this is something people want. I鈥檓 a little dubious that anyone would buy a product that drops functions in certain areas and is only helpful if the other guy uses it too.

And, as TechDirt suggests: 鈥淲hile it's nice to think that technology could somehow block out rude uses of devices, the opportunity for problems and abuse seems quite high. Wouldn't we be better off focusing on social norms to get people to learn when it is and is not appropriate to use certain technologies?鈥

[Via ]

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Microsoft, the manner police
Read this article in
/Technology/Horizons/2008/0612/microsoft-the-manner-police
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe