Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

X-ray to fix broken earphone

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 20 Jul, 2014 07:17 AM
    This may sound bizarre but a US doctor has used X-ray machine to fix his broken headphone after "diagnosing" a tiny break in the cords.
     
    To find what infected the right earphone, he X-rayed different parts of the cords and found a four-mm tear in the wires, right next to the splitter.
     
    Matt Skalski, a radiology resident at Southern California University of Health Sciences, damaged his headphones when shifting office.
     
    "Closed fracture of a speaker wire within its rubber/plastic sleeve is a rare headphone injury, usually due to a traction trauma," Skalski wrote in his report on Radiopaedia.org, a Wikipedia-like platform for radiologists.
     
    He spliced it out and put it all back together.
     
    "The headphones showed 90 percent recovery, with only mild volume loss overall and approximately four cm of cord shortening," Skalski added in his report.
     
    Moreover, the "surgery" cost Skalski just $1 and was over in 30 minutes.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Onward robotic soldiers: IIT students pioneer cutting-edge research

    Onward robotic soldiers: IIT students pioneer cutting-edge research
    Picture this: Robots braving bullets while ferrying weapons and ammunition to soldiers on the battle front. Or, a robotic arm resembling the human variety that can work in hazardous areas like blast furnaces. Students at IIT-Roorkee are swotting to turn these ideas into reality.

    Onward robotic soldiers: IIT students pioneer cutting-edge research

    Here's app to help when caught DUI

    Here's app to help when caught DUI
    Had a tipple too many and have to drive thereafter? Don't fear -- if you are caught driving under the influence, switch on this app on your smartphone to know your basic legal rights.

    Here's app to help when caught DUI

    Smart phone tools can drive smokers to quit

    Smart phone tools can drive smokers to quit
    Smart phones and tablets may hold the key to get more clinicians screen patients for tobacco use and advise smokers on how to quit, research shows.

    Smart phone tools can drive smokers to quit

    Here's an App that lets you chat without data connection!

    Here's an App that lets you chat without data connection!
    Move over WhatsApp. Here comes a revolutionary chatting App that has taken the mobile messaging to another level. With this, you are able to send and receive messages even when you do not have an actual internet or wi-fi data connection.

    Here's an App that lets you chat without data connection!

    Soon, Donate Your Voice Too!

    Soon, Donate Your Voice Too!
    Professor Rupal Patel from the Northwestern University and Tim Bunnel from the Nemours Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children have created a new technology called VocaliD that can build synthetic voices using whatever vocal sounds a patient can produce.

    Soon, Donate Your Voice Too!

    Drink from this bottle, then eat it too!

    Drink from this bottle, then eat it too!
    What about drinking your favourite cold drink or simply plain bottled water and then eating the bottle instead of throwing it in the bin or by the roadside? Spanish researchers have designed a blob design for water bottle that is edible.

    Drink from this bottle, then eat it too!