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Communications Wireless Networking

Using Wi-Fi To Count People Through Walls (techcrunch.com) 26

An anonymous reader shares a report: Whether you're trying to figure out how many students are attending your lectures or how many evil aliens have taken your Space Force brethren hostage, Wi-Fi can now be used to count them all. The system, created by researchers at UC Santa Barbara, uses a single Wi-Fi router outside of the room to measure attenuation and signal drops. From the release: "The transmitter sends a wireless signal whose received signal strength (RSSI) is measured by the receiver. Using only such received signal power measurements, the receiver estimates how many people are inside the room -- an estimate that closely matches the actual number. It is noteworthy that the researchers do not do any prior measurements or calibration in the area of interest; their approach has only a very short calibration phase that need not be done in the same area." This means that you could simply walk up to a wall and press a button to count, with a high degree of accuracy, how many people are walking around. The system can measure up to 20 people in its current form.
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Using Wi-Fi To Count People Through Walls

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  • Wifi has to much overlap to jam up channels with this

  • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2018 @03:32PM (#57380970)

    If I use this to spy on my neighbors and find out they're being periodically abducted by the Asgard, should I tell them?

    Joking aside, the accuracy is around 2 people, and it can't tell you anything about distribution. So on average, you have no idea if there are people or not. But you can tell a crowded room from an empty room, at least in rooms that if empty would have a normal attenuation pattern.

    Pretty weak sauce. Old-school DIY radar on the same frequency is generally more accurate than this.

  • could they get better granularity? I'm thinking 2.4 and 5.0 ?

    My house has thick enough walls that it would probably be difficult to discern much, unless someone floated a drone above it.

  • by Obfuscant ( 592200 ) on Wednesday September 26, 2018 @04:13PM (#57381172)
    Clickbait for sucking eyeballs to advertising.

    It doesn't matter how much power you transmit outside a room, the received signal AT THE TRANSMITTER is not going to be attenuated by the people in the room. In fact, the received signal will depend ONLY upon the transmitted signal level -- the receiver and the transmitter are connected to the same antennas.

    This is patent nonsense.

  • For some reason, that doesn't work.

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