Images: Adding sound to pictures - TechRepublic

Images: Adding sound to pictures

  • hq looks just like hp

    Italian start-up Zanetti Studio is marketing a printer that places magnetic sound strips on photos. Here, a Zanetti advertisement mock-up that has Hewlett-Packard’s familiar look and feel simply inverts the “p” in the “hp” logo. The “hq speekysmart 4001,” however, has nothing to do with the American PC maker. Zanetti Studio, marketer of the speekysmart printer, which promises to add verbal comments to photos, was asked by HP to remove the ad from public sites.

    Zanetti Studio
  • The next phase of the printer ad drops the HP-like logo, but it still resembles many of the company’s recent print ads. Promising to “add sound to your digital pictures,” the mock-up now brandishes a white Speeky logo.

  • Zanetti Studio is looking for a hardware-manufacturing partner to expand on its concept of adding audio tracks to photos, paper and other materials. This handheld mouse-like device reads a magnetic strip on the side of an 8.5-inch by 11-inch paper that can record 4 to 5 seconds of audio.

  • This artist’s sketch of a futuristic cell phone shows how the handset could be equipped with a magnetic reader. That way, people would be able read magnetic strips without having to carry around another device in their pocket. Zanetti Studio is currently looking for a partner to mass-produce the hardware.

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Bill Detwiler is the Editor for Technical Content and Ecosystem at Celonis. He is the former Editor in Chief of TechRepublic and previous host of TechRepublic's Dynamic Developer podcast and Cracking Open, CNET and TechRepublic's popular online show. Previously, Bill was an IT manager in the social research and energy industries. He has bachelor's and master's degrees from the University of Louisville, where he has also lectured on computer crime and crime prevention.