mobile phone blockers
#1
Posted 29 April 2012 - 07:50 PM
#2
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:02 PM
#3
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:06 PM
#4
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:13 PM
Maximum penalty two years imprisonment and an unlimited fine, really not worth it..
#5
Posted 29 April 2012 - 08:54 PM
If it's purely the audience receiving calls mid show that's a problem then I'm afraid nobody's going to find a cure for stupid punters. If you're looking to counteract RF problems (the dreaded dip de dip de dip of mobile phone interference) then I'd suggest that having a reasonable power RF jammer in the building is probably counter-productive!
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Master of Nazi Pigeons, Dying Roses and Animatronic Dogs.
#6
Posted 29 April 2012 - 09:54 PM
#7
Posted 29 April 2012 - 10:54 PM
On a related note, you could also put a row of infra red LEDs along the front edge of the stage pointing out at the audience. The LEDs would 'blind' most mobile phone cameras so hopefully people would get the message and stop filming and taking photos at every show. Honestly, am I the only one that gets annoyed by the sea of mobiles that seem to appear at every gig?
#8
Posted 29 April 2012 - 11:35 PM
gyro_gearloose, on 29 April 2012 - 10:54 PM, said:
On the basis that the image and sound quality is usually terrible, I don't think the use of mobiles for taking gig snapshots is a major issue. As far as I'm concerned it's all free advertising.
#9
Posted 30 April 2012 - 07:07 AM
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#10
Posted 30 April 2012 - 07:40 AM
I note quite a few riders are upping the importance of FoH staff stopping recording, even if it is disruptive - something they hate doing.
#11
Posted 30 April 2012 - 07:40 AM
Quote
If you're a punter and you can't see the stage too well because of the forest of arms holding mobiles in the air, then its a problem. And even if they aren't in your way, the glowing screen is a distraction I could personally live without.
#12
Posted 30 April 2012 - 07:54 AM
#13
Posted 30 April 2012 - 08:49 AM
gyro_gearloose, on 30 April 2012 - 07:40 AM, said:
Quote
If you're a punter and you can't see the stage too well because of the forest of arms holding mobiles in the air, then its a problem. And even if they aren't in your way, the glowing screen is a distraction I could personally live without.
paulears, on 30 April 2012 - 07:54 AM, said:
Well aimed air rifle?
Grumpy Old Man
#14
Posted 30 April 2012 - 09:14 AM
On topic, any messing around with what is still known as "Her Majesty's Posts and Telecommunications" is rather frowned upon and was only recently demoted from a hanging offence like treason or arson in HM dockyards. When PO/BT were addressing the old CB radio problem they could impound vehicles and sell them back at one third list price so a coach company had to find £30,000 because they had fitted three £45 illegal AM CB's back in the eighties.
#15
Posted 30 April 2012 - 10:19 AM
gyro_gearloose, on 29 April 2012 - 10:54 PM, said:
I thought about this a while ago - you'd need decent ones that don't glow when they're on - but I reckon some IR emitters (the type designed for CCTV) placed at various key points with a ramping brightness (not all synchronised either) would successfully confuse most auto exposure on mobile phone cameras .. I wonder if someone's patented that ..... (of course, by publishing it here I've just completely removed the possibility of doing so - damn
Pete McCrea, on 30 April 2012 - 07:07 AM, said:
I've been around things like that ... and yes, there are always some exceptions to the rules... I'm willing to bet the kit they're using is very accurate and has no risk of jamming or interfering with other frequencies (many of the cheap off the shelf cellphone jammers can affect things well outside of the band they're trying to block - e.g. emergency services)
There are commercial solutions which (still illegal unless you have the appropriate licenses, which you won't get) work in a different way entirely - they appear as pico nodes to the mobile network (e.g. miniature cellphone base stations) and broadcast *all* the appropriate local mobile network codes... end result your punters phones 'roam' onto *your* closed mobile network which the mobile will use in preference to the 'real' network, the phones themselves will all still show a full signal, but won't work. You could even set these up to allow calls to 999/112 to complete as normal.
Imho whilst it's completely at odds with the law at the moment, there's no reason why technology such as this could not be developed into a low-powered properly licensable product designed purely to prevent INCOMING calls within a certain area.


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