Gadgets
Four Crazy Radio Concepts to Celebrate National Inventor's Day
Posted by Addy Dugdale at 11:53 PM on February 11, 2008
Today is National Inventor's Day, in honour of Thomas Edison, and Giz is going to celebrate it with some designs from the Work In Progress show by students at London's Royal College of Art. There are no less than four concept radios in the show, including this one by Mikael Silvanto, which melds a slide rule with an iPod-esque analog radio. The other three, including one which uses QR codes to hook up graffiti artists with pirate radio stations, are below.
Yuri Suzuki's design uses a Post-It pad to mark out the frequencies of pirate radio stations that caught her ear while living in North London. "My radio enables you to make notes about the radio station and mark its position," she says. "The radio looks like a memo pad, but underneath is a speaker; the pencil acts as the antenna that controls tuning and volume."
Yuri feels there is a connection between graffiti artists and pirate radio stations, as both are art forms that hack into public spaces. Her Future Pirate Radio lets you tune into pirate radio via QR codes. First, the graffiti artist stencils a QR code onto the wall, incorporating it into their work. Anyone who takes a picture of the graffiti will then be able to tune into the pirate radio station that inspired the artist via the internet.
Finally, Jochem Faudet's work consists of a pair of radios whose controls are grouped together in order to make it easier to use. Actually, it's rather complicated, so here's Jochem's own explanation.
"Radio 1: All the tuning and volume functions are grouped around the speaker. The On/Off switch and volume function is situated closest to the speaker. The AM/FM switch is situated at the end of the tuning circle, by flicking the switch down it points to the FM numbers situated on the outside of the circle or by flicking the switch up it points to AM numbers on the inside of the tuning semi-circle.
"Radio 2: The tuning function and volume function are separated from each other in this concept. To adjust the volume one has to turn the wheel with the integrated speaker, by sliding the AM/FM switch to FM it hides the frequencies of the AM and vice versa."
Nope, still too complicated for me, I'm afraid. [Dezeen]

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
Elvisisdead
Posted 12:58 AM 12/2/08
#1 isn't all that innovative. It's just a pared down version of my Bang & Olufsen tuner.
Elvisisdead
scuba_steve
Posted 2:09 AM 12/2/08
Which B&O tuner looks like #1? If you mean the fact that you have a slider to adjust the frequency, that's hardly what makes this an innovative design (here, the whole radio slides not just a control on the radio).
Or perhaps you just want everyone to know you have a B&O tuner?
scuba_steve
RainyDayInterns
Posted 3:25 AM 12/2/08
If we had a B&O tuner, we would also want everyone to know :-)
RainyDayInterns
vowell1055
Posted 3:25 AM 12/2/08
I like #1.
vowell1055
Ghede
Posted 4:44 AM 12/2/08
@permissionmag: Not to mention he had a workshop, stocked with tools, materials, and inventors. He didn't necessarily steal the patents, but he put them under his name. I bet a few companies have surpassed his patent #, but people don't call them the greatest American inventor.
Ghede
permissionmag
Posted 4:44 AM 12/2/08
Thomas Edison was kind of a jerk. He had some great inventions, but he wasn't above infringing on other people's patents, or driving his competitors into ruin through questionable business practices. His fame really comes more from his business acumen than his technical skills.
Come to think of it, he was kind of the proto-Bill Gates.
permissionmag
guypatsy
Posted 11:29 AM 12/2/08
You can not celebrate Edison with radios. Tesla was responsible for the first wireless broadcast, and he was a true inventor. If you really want to celebrate Edison you should burn radios, kill elephants, and power your whole house on DC.
guypatsy