
Nintendo’s Duck Hunt Zipper Gun is easy to get out of the gaming of tech 80. The way this device worked with Nes to determine if you shoot these poor innocent pixel ducks are really some easily modern things. Unfortunately, with modern technology we do not really really have a lot of space designed to work with CRTTV.
The next logical move is to see what we can do with these cool light readings guns. In a real tribute to the old memories of 80, a hobby has turned Zipper into a working telephone.
In the 80s and 90s, novelty domestic phones were high. Once people realized that the outer shells of these plastic could be mainly shaped like anything, well they took it as a challenge. According to HectaNick has taken this challenge to the next level by producing a surprisingly non -practical zipper phone.
Instead of reading the CRT screen for the perfect input of light samples, Nick uses Zipper’s light sensing ability to receive phone calls and move audio. These phones do this by reading the samples in the laser lights transferred from the base station and translating these waves into audio. This is in fact based on the first phone invented in 1880 that used light to move the sound. What is old is new and old again.
He guessed that the device could be used after tears fully on the zipper, which you could also do Check it on its channel. It was well understood about the gun functioning, and also found out how to ignore Nintendo’s anti -chat technology in Zipper.
With Nick’s own entry, an incredible zipper phone is a real negative aspect. Receiving laser IT has to indicate the whole, which is not very useful for a wireless device ..
“It’s actually as bad as a phone.” Nick says, “The quality of the sound is very good, but you have to put a line of line with the laser, and it has to stand just properly.” Fortunately, the tech here is very good, I really don’t care how useful the device is.
Since these guns do not come with the microphone, for some reason, Nick has also added one for the project. As a result, the setup is a magical laser communication device that transmits audio between base station and guns. Also you have to talk to Nes Zapper Gun, what else do you want?
You can take a better look at Nick’s creation in the aforementioned video, including a explainer about how it works, and the Demo Video of the final results. As I said, it is not beautiful, nor practical, but it is really cool.