12 comments

  • maqp 38 minutes ago
    Some DJs use this principle when they need a hacky stage mic. They plug their headphones to the mixer's mic input, and shout to the speaker element.
  • dickfickling 1 hour ago
    I have vague memories of iPod Linux (or Rockbox, I can’t remember) having a feature where you could record voice notes using your regular headphones using the same technique
  • userbinator 58 minutes ago
    Not all speakers work well as dynamic mics; and in fact turning on mic mode may enable the bias voltage, which could either burn out the voice coil or hold the diaphragm against the stop, making it even less likely to pick up any sound.

    Jack retasking, although documented in applicable technical specifications, is not well-known, as was mentioned by the Linux audio developer

    This could be a "bubble effect"; the Realtek codecs mentioned have a Windows utility to configure the jacks, which countless otherwise non-technical users would've seen and interacted with, so awareness of this feature is probably higher than they think. Fun fact: the "ALC" prefix in their codec names stands for Avance Logic, which was acquired by Realtek and they just kept that prefix well into the HD Audio era.

  • jpc0 1 hour ago
    A magnet in a coil operates both ways, this is non intuitive but perfectly sound.

    Not sure if it's mentioned in the article but microphones can be speakers too...

    • userbinator 57 minutes ago
      Not sure if it's mentioned in the article but microphones can be speakers too...

      Only dynamic mics, which are relatively rare and seldom encountered without an attached preamp. The vast majority of mics for PCs are condensers and electrets.

      Anything can be a speaker, briefly and only once, if you apply enough voltage to it...

      • atoav 1 minute ago
        [delayed]
    • bigbugbag 1 hour ago
      same with solar panels, they can be reversed to emit light.
      • d3Xt3r 45 minutes ago
        Same with LEDs, they can be reversed to generate electricity.
      • kqr 57 minutes ago
        What's their spectrum?
    • akoboldfrying 41 minutes ago
      > perfectly sound.

      I hear what you did there

  • BFV 1 hour ago
    That’s actually a pretty wild concept—turning speakers into microphones sounds like one of those “this shouldn’t work, but it does” kind of hacks
    • atoav 0 minutes ago
      [delayed]
    • vidarh 1 hour ago
      I hadn't thought about whether this would still with modern speakers, but this was the common assumption for several older types of speakers and microphones.

      One of the first "science experiments" my dad showed me was the other direction: Dismantling our telephone and demonstrating that the carbon microphone (yes, I'm old) in the handset would also work as a (really bad) speaker.

    • hecanjog 1 hour ago
      This shouldn't be downvoted. Transducers being reversible is a neat and non-obvious thing.
      • dnnddidiej 1 hour ago
        Motors can be dynamos too
        • maqp 40 minutes ago
          and many LEDs are weak photo-diodes, i.e. you get weak current when you shine a light to them.
      • saagarjha 1 hour ago
        It's probably downvoted because it sounds somewhat nonorganic.
  • Se_ba 25 minutes ago
    Tbh it's crazy that you can do it in some of the microwaves
  • m4lvin 1 hour ago
    Okay, but how do I use this as a replacement when the mic is not working on Linux?
  • AmmarSaleh50 25 minutes ago
    don't let the CIA see this one
  • me_jumper 1 hour ago
    This needs a (2017), I was so confused why this was published again, seemed so familiar.
  • villgax 43 minutes ago
    If this or an accelerometer based recording is what Meta uses to eavesdrop on in-person talk then color me pink
    • murderfs 23 minutes ago
      It's pretty unlikely that Meta is actually eavesdropping on your conversations, because it'd be immediately obvious from battery usage. The ability to turn speakers into microphones doesn't help if the speakers aren't actually connected to an ADC, and both of the modern smartphone OSes limit you to on the order of hundreds of samples per second, so it's rather difficult to get anything sensible without either doing a bunch of local analysis or exfiltrating it, both of which would be visible.