Chances are you’ve used an audio equalizer before, and chances are there was a lot of blindly turning dials and hoping something good happened. The Timbre Speaker embraces exactly that kind of blind experimentation by using nothing but two glasses for its sound control. Designed by industrial design student Casey Lin, the speaker appears to be just a wooden box with a volume knob on the front, and power and input in the back. But on the inside, surface transducers turn vibrate the box’s wooden shell. The glasses—or whatever else you want to put on top—can morph and change the timbre of that sound, acting as physical equalizer.
From a practical perspective, it’s pretty ridiculous; this is a pretty bad way to try to control the nuance of your sound. But it’s less about getting the job done right, and more about getting it done in an interesting way. And it doesn’t hurt that it also looks damn fine. It’s only a concept, but it’s a fun one, as long as you’re not an audio control freak.
Source: Gizmodo, designbycl
More Stories
Choosing a Portable All-Band Radio for Emergencies
After a recent conversation among friends over choosing a portable all-band radio suitable for emergencies....
theHamStop.com Introduces theCleatV
theHamStop.com has a new item in the shop just in time for 2024 Field Day!!. The announcement from theHamStop.com...
theCleatV and theSkyHookx3x8 are available
theHamStop.com has been at it AGAIN!! with 2 new products added to their inventory. The announcement from theHamStop.com of the...
E-beam atomic-scale 3-D ‘sculpting’ could enable new quantum nanodevices
koi phys.org/news/2020-09-e-beam-atomic-scale-d-sculpting-enable.amp
Facebook Paying Social Media Users to Suspend Accounts Ahead of November Elections
Facebook is offering money to those who are willing to stop using Facebook and Instagram in the weeks before the...
Updates to WeatherRoom and Amateur Radio Links
Quick updates to Weather Room and Amateur Radio links. WeatherRoom: Added a Realtime weather loop to the page. Likely will...