During yesterdayâs I/O keynote, Google announced a rather fantastic new feature coming to the Chromecast: soon, your friends wonât need to be connected to your WiFi to be able to send things to your TV. As long as theyâre in the same room, it should just work.
But how?
While Googleâs Rishi Chandra mentioned yesterday that the new WiFi-less pairing system used a âvariety of technologiesâ to determine when youâre near a Chromecast unit, he didnât really breakdown what those technologies might be. Bluetooth? Some proprietary protocol that Google had cooked up? Magic?
Turns out, itâs closest to that last one â" or at least, itâll probably seem like magic to anyone without superhuman hearing.
Thanks to a post-Keynote presentation, we now have a better idea of how itâll work: ultrasonic soundwaves, inaudible to the human ear.
Once youâve configured your Chromecast to allow nearby devices to connect, the Chromecast will push a uniquely generated ultrasonic sound through your TVâs speakers. Encoded in that soundwave is everything a phone needs to know to get paired up. You canât hear these sounds, but your phone can.
Apps using the Chromecast SDK will use your smartphoneâs microphone to listen for these soundwaves. Once one is detected, itâll offer up a Chromecast pairing button just as it would if you were on the same WiFi network.
Sound familiar? Googleâs engineers have actually been playing with the idea of ultrasonic networking for at least the last year. At TechCrunch Disrupt SF last September, meanwhile, a company called SlickLogin debuted a method of using ultrasonic sounds for 2-factor authentication without the extra typing. They went on to be acquired just five months later. The buyer? You guessed it: Google.
[Via GigaOm]
No comments:
Post a Comment