Always wanted loud music
without the whole mess? heres a dream come true A team of students from Exeter
University in UK has developed an app that can sync music from different
devices. The app, developed by Edward Noel, Rob Parker, Alex Bochenski and
Jonathan Neuman, is called SoundSynk and allows the user to play music from an
infinite number of devices at the same time. The
team from Exeter University has won a prize of 33,100 pounds to further develop
the app, SoundSynk, in innovation at the Imagine Cup, a global student
technology competition held in Russia. SoundSynk connects phones and other
devices through a so-called artificial mesh network, allowing them to play the
same song on all devices in perfect harmony. The team has so far tested it on
75 devices and hope the app will be available across all platforms in August,
BBC News reported. "With this technology, we can create hyper-local social
networks. SoundSynk is the first practical use of this technology and we are
all very excited about its future applications," said student Rob Parker. The
team, including Edward Noel, came up with the idea late on a Saturday night in
February. They were playing Sweet Nothings by the DJ, Calvin Harris, on a
laptop and they wanted to have it louder as they brainstormed. "Being
students we wanted to have a little rave but the volume was not sufficient,"
Alex Bochenski said. "At this point we did the age-old technique of lining
up all of our phones, laptops, tablets and trying to play the song at the same
time," Bochenski said. It didn't work - but it sparked the idea of the app
that would eventually see them beating teams from Slovenia and Thailand in the
innovation category. "We developed a prototype of the product in 24 hours
for the regionals of the Imagine Cup," Bochenski said. Eighty-seven
student teams from 71 countries competed in the worldwide finals of the Imagine
cup sponsored by Microsoft.
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