http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2005/03/20/2003247076


New technology uses human body for broadband networking
By sending data over the surface of the skin, it may soon be possible
to trade music files by dancing cheek to cheek, or to swap phone
numbers by kissing

By Paul Rubens
THE GUARDIAN , LONDON
Sunday, Mar 20, 2005,Page 12

"I recently acquired my own in-body device -- a pacemaker -- but it
takes a special radio frequency connector to interface to it. As more
and more implants go into bodies, the need for a good Internet
Protocol connection increases."

Gordon Bell, a senior researcher at Microsoft's Bay Area Research
Center in San Francisco
Your body could soon be the backbone of a broadband personal data
network linking your mobile phone or MP3 player to a cordless headset,
your digital camera to a PC or printer, and all the gadgets you carry
around to each other.

These personal area networks are already possible using radio-based
technologies, such as Wi-Fi or Bluetooth, or just plain old cables to
connect devices. But NTT, the Japanese communications company, has
developed a technology called RedTacton, which it claims can send data
over the surface of the skin at speeds of up to 2Mbps -- equivalent to
a fast broadband data connection.

Using RedTacton-enabled devices, music from an MP3 player in your
pocket would pass through your clothing and shoot over your body to
headphones in your ears. Instead of fiddling around with a cable to
connect your digital camera to your computer, you could transfer
pictures just by touching the PC while the camera is around your neck.
And since data can pass from one body to another, you could also
exchange electronic business cards by shaking hands, trade music files
by dancing cheek to cheek, or swap phone numbers just by kissing.

NTT is not the first company to use the human body as a conduit for
data: IBM pioneered the field in 1996 with a system that could
transfer small amounts of data at very low speeds, and last June,
Microsoft was granted a patent for "a method and apparatus for
transmitting power and data using the human body."

But RedTacton is arguably the first practical system because, unlike
IBM's or Microsoft's, it doesn't need transmitters to be in direct
contact with the skin -- they can be built into gadgets, carried in
pockets or bags, and will work within about 20cm of your body.
RedTacton doesn't introduce an electric current into the body --
instead, it makes use of the minute electric field that occurs
naturally on the surface of every human body. A transmitter attached
to a device, such as an MP3 player, uses this field to send data by
modulating the field minutely in the same way that a radio carrier
wave is modulated to carry information.

Receiving data is more complicated because the strength of the
electric field involved is so low. RedTacton gets around this using a
technique called electric field photonics: A laser is passed though an
electro-optic crystal, which deflects light differently according to
the strength of the field across it. These deflections are measured
and converted back into electrical signals to retrieve the transmitted
data.

An obvious question, however, is why anyone would bother networking
though their body when proven radio-based personal area networking
technologies, such as Bluetooth, already exist? Tom Zimmerman, the
inventor of the original IBM system, says body-based networking is
more secure than broadcast systems, such as Bluetooth, which have a
range of about 10m.

"With Bluetooth, it is difficult to rein in the signal and restrict it
to the device you are trying to connect to," says Zimmerman. "You
usually want to communicate with one particular thing, but in a busy
place there could be hundreds of Bluetooth devices within range."

As human beings are ineffective aerials, it is very hard to pick up
stray electronic signals radiating from the body, he says. "This is
good for security because even if you encrypt data it is still
possible that it could be decoded, but if you can't pick it up it
can't be cracked."

Zimmerman also believes that, unlike infrared or Bluetooth phones and
PDAs, which enable people to "beam" electronic business cards across a
room without ever formally meeting, body-based networking allows for
more natural interchanges of information between humans.

"If you are very close or touching someone, you are either in a busy
subway train, or you are being intimate with them, or you want to
communicate," he says. "I think it is good to be close to someone when
you are exchanging information."

RedTacton transceivers can be treated as standard network devices, so
software running over Ethernet or other TCP/IP protocol-based networks
will run unmodified.

Gordon Bell, a senior researcher at Microsoft's Bay Area Research
Center in San Francisco, says that while Bluetooth or other radio
technologies may be perfectly suitable to link gadgets for many
personal area networking purposes, there are certain applications for
which RedTacton technology would be ideal.

"I recently acquired my own in-body device -- a pacemaker -- but it
takes a special radio frequency connector to interface to it. As more
and more implants go into bodies, the need for a good Internet
Protocol connection increases," he says.

In the near future, the most important application for body-based
networking may well be for communications within, rather than on the
surface of, or outside, the body.

An intriguing possibility is that the technology will be used as a
sort of secondary nervous system to link large numbers of tiny
implanted components placed beneath the skin to create powerful
onboard -- or in-body -- computers.
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