Staying one step behind

This is why teenagers need to be watched all the time:

NEW YORK (AP) – Students are using a new ring tone to receive messages in class — and many teachers can’t even hear the ring.

Some students are downloading a ring tone off the Internet that is too high-pitched to be heard by most adults. With it, high schoolers can receive text message alerts on their cell phones without the teacher knowing.

As people age, many develop what’s known as aging ear — a loss of the ability to hear higher-frequency sounds.

The ring tone is a spin-off of technology that was originally meant to repel teenagers — not help them. A Welsh security company developed the tone to help shopkeepers disperse young people loitering in front of their stores while leaving adults unaffected. The company called their product the “Mosquito.”

Donna Lewis, a teacher in Manhattan, says her colleague played the ring for a classroom of first-graders — and all of them could hear it, while the adults couldn’t hear anything.

Crafty little buggers. Time for teachers to make the kids leave their phones in a basket on the teacher’s desk.

I’m starting to regret again that I wasn’t born a couple of decades later. Oooh, what I could have done with technology added to my other tools of rebellion.

Update: You can hear the sound here. Well, you can if you’re not old. I doubt you’ll be able to hear it; I’ve had extraordinary hearing most of my life, and I can’t hear a damned thing but background noise.

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5 Responses to Staying one step behind

  1. russ says:

    Sounds like a lot of work to fool teachers. What’s wrong with just setting the phone to vibrate? Nobody can hear that, either. Besides, won’t teachers notice if you hold a phone to your ear, even if they don’t hear the ring?

  2. TMA says:

    yeah, but the other students can’t hear the vibrating phone, either — the point is to have everyone ELSE in class know you’re getting a call.

    isn’t it? I’ll confess, I’m just guessing.

  3. Alex Bensky says:

    I’m not sure why this is a problem. I’m a former teacher. Teachers may not be able to hear the ring tone but they ought to be able to see the kids most of the time if they answer it.

  4. *Micol* says:

    I can hear it. Ugh. Horribly annoying sound, why would anyone want to put that as a cell phone message notifying ring?

  5. Just gave the URL to some of the guys at work. The older one (not very old, twentysomething) heard it and the younger one didn’t.

    Interesting.

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