

server: winbeta.org - 13.06.2007
Tip: Click here to update all your PC's outdated driversAustralian supercapacitor maker, Cap-XX, has introduced a supercapacitor based technology, 'BriteSound', for mobile phones that it claims can produce greatly improved sound quality.
"With MP3-ready handsets growing in popularity, consumers want an iPod-quality audio experience without the distortion that interrupts music when the phone has to handle other peak-power functions," said CAP-XX CEO, Anthony Kongats. "We are working with key mobile-phone manufacturers and expect the first designs that are power-boosted by our supercapacitors to hit the market in 2008."
Good quality sound at high volume, especially of bass notes, puts a substantial drain on the cellphone's battery, which also has to power normal phone functions. As the current drawn from any battery increases its voltage drops and these voltage fluctuations produce varying kinds of distortion in any music pumped through an amplifier driven by that battery.
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