Beer Fridge Caught Interfering With Cellular Network 231
aesoteric writes "A man's backyard beer fridge in Australia has been busted interfering with the cellular network of major carrier Telstra. Engineers used an internally-developed software 'robot' to crawl log files from the network and sent a field team out to pinpoint the cause of the interference."
How (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:G'DAY MATE (Score:3, Insightful)
Or Little Creatures. Mmmmm.
Why can't we have more interesting stories? (Score:3, Insightful)
Why can't we have more stories like this? Why does it always have to be something political or an advertisement for a product or the usual MS bashing stories? This title alone is more interesting than any "news" story I've seen on Slashdot in the last year.
Software robot? (Score:5, Insightful)
Engineers used an internally-developed software 'robot' to crawl log files from the network.
Seriously? I know it's actually stated that way in TFA, but are people that stupid that they can't simply say "program"? In all likelihood, it's probably a 10-line Perl script. (Said as Perl fan, myself.)
Re:G'DAY MATE (Score:5, Insightful)
Vegemite is awesome, lightly spread of hot toasted light rye so that it's salty and chewy at the same time.
The mistake most foreigners make is slathering it on like peanut butter. It's a strong taste and you don't need much.
Re:Respect Your Elders, Telstra! (Score:4, Insightful)
But TFA glossed over a very important part of the story, after the offending fridge was deactivated... How did the owner keep his beer cold?
Obviously,he drank them all. Problem solved (for now).
Re:How (Score:4, Insightful)
No, purpose-built transmitters necessarily have a single frequency, but ACCIDENTAL transmitters can crap all over the radio spectrum.
http://radiohax.wikispaces.com/Spark+gap+transmitter [wikispaces.com]