

- CHRONO TRIGGER REMAKE KICKSTARTER FULL
- CHRONO TRIGGER REMAKE KICKSTARTER BLUETOOTH
- CHRONO TRIGGER REMAKE KICKSTARTER TV
Or to give you a car analogy, just because internal combustion engines are used to drive cars does not mean that you can run a 4 litre V8 engine at full power and get 100 miles to the gallon This also assumes your tag is out in the open, with nothing on top or even behind it that would attenuate the signal, in which case making it brightly colored might be all that is needed. You have the main cell transmitter which can be up to a watt, but it isn't typically running at full power and has a small duty cycle when not making calls.
CHRONO TRIGGER REMAKE KICKSTARTER BLUETOOTH
If you are trying to power it off the bluetooth of a cell phone, most are class 2 with a maximum power of 2.5 mW, which wouldn't be enough. And this is assuming your AP is working at full 1 W power continuously (In EU they would be limited to 100 mW, for example). The harvester chip gives a minimum RF input of -10 dBm, which means you would still need an antenna 20 cm square to work at that level 5 m from a wifi AP. Heck, if your device was an inch square, it would barely be able to power the bluetooth in sleep mode, with no power left over to charge up to allow it to briefly transmit.Īnd this is ignoring things like the antenna not being able to capture 100% of the power going through it, and that your harvesting chip isn't 100% efficient. When idle, you would still need an antenna with ~0.5 m^2, so like 70 cm on a side square. hence you would need an antenna with an area of 10 m^2 to get that type of power to run continuously off a Wifi AP. The chip you selected runs at least 1.8 V, so it needs ~30 mW when active. It appears, based on my back of an envelope math, it would have enough RF energy to operate continuously at at least 5meters from your typical Wifi AP or router.ĥ meters from a maximum 1 W transmitter gives you 3 mW / m^2. And best of all, it's all environmentally friendly and fair-trade, with 10% of all proceeds going to benefit orphaned pandas. With our patented technology, you'll be safer than ever.

And for the especially gullible-those of you who have lost thousands or tens of thousands of dollars to scammers before- you need the top-level security provided by iScam Pro, which has a more powerful induction circuit, both increasing the range of the device and allowing it to detect even the tiniest fib! Pledge just $999 and we'll send you an iScam Pro. For $100, we'll send you an improved prototype with even more sensitive scam-detection algorithms. Pledge just $15 and we'll send you one device. if there's any deception in the area, iScam will be activated and you'll be alerted! Simply aim the device at your computer screen, or hold it up to the phone when you get that too-good-to-be-true offer, or even point it at your lover. When negative energy released by a scam such as this one activates the device, it generates a current which in turn activates a blinking LED, with the frequency of the blinking being proportional to the negative energy field. Inside every iScam is a tiny induction coil that is powered by negative energy. That's why my team has developed iScam, the revolutionary new fraud-protection device. For that matter, the entire internet is full of scams and con-men waiting to take your money. We desperately need some way to tell legitimate Kickstarter campaigns from frauds. Bring your own popcorn and enjoy the show." Skeptics are maintaining a Google Doc with many of the highlights of the action. It seems self-evident that such scams should not be allowed to propagate on Kickstarter, for the good of other genuine projects and the community at large. Kickstarter appear uninterested in what can only be described as a slow-motion bank robbery, despite their basic requirement to demonstrate a prototype. Using just their published figures, their claims are readily refuted, yet still backers flock in. The creators have yet to post even a single photo of the magical device, instead posting empty platitudes and claims that such secrecy is necessary to protect their IP. With six days to go until they walk off with the money, skeptics abound (10min in) including some excellent dissections of their claims. So far they've picked up half a million in pledges. The creators have posted no evidence other than some slick Photoshop work, an obviously faked video, some easily disproven data, and classic bad science.
CHRONO TRIGGER REMAKE KICKSTARTER TV
Nothing new about such tags (there are many crowdfunded examples some have delivered, some have disappointed), but this one claims it doesn't require any batteries - it harvests its energy from electromagnetic emissions (wifi, cell towers, TV signals, etc). New submitter FryingLizard (512858) writes For a while I've been following the saga of the Kickstarter "iFind" Bluetooth 4.0 tracking tag.
