News0 min ago
Sky installation and chip in doorstep
16 Answers
I was at a friends house on Sunday and he was showing me his new Sky TV installation. He went on to show me a small chip that the engineer had installed into the doorstep leading into his back garden. Although he asked the engineer what it was for, apparently, the engineer would not say, or possibly he couldn't be bothered to explain. The chip (if thats what it is) is about 1/3rd inch round. a small hole was drilled into outside the edge of the doorstep very low down and whatever the device is was pushed into the drilled hole. Can anyone tell me what it does?
Cheers CG
Cheers CG
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by Cockney Guy. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Thanks for your answers and as you say, a bit weird.
I've just come off the phone from someone else who has Sky (I do'nt have) and she said that Sky tried to sell her some other package and during the conversation they were able to tell her which films etc she had watched recently. Could it have something to do with monitoring your viewing habits, do you think?
Cheers for your input Kosta and carlton23
I've just come off the phone from someone else who has Sky (I do'nt have) and she said that Sky tried to sell her some other package and during the conversation they were able to tell her which films etc she had watched recently. Could it have something to do with monitoring your viewing habits, do you think?
Cheers for your input Kosta and carlton23
sounds more like a wind up
of course they know what you are watching ... they make sure you only see what you've paid for - and there is a phoneline stuck in the back
if you were doing covert observations ... you wouldn't start by drilling a bl@@dy hole in full view of everybody .... would you?
and if you were stopping hackers ... you'd think the gizmo would be in the box ... not outside the house embedded in the step!!
of course they know what you are watching ... they make sure you only see what you've paid for - and there is a phoneline stuck in the back
if you were doing covert observations ... you wouldn't start by drilling a bl@@dy hole in full view of everybody .... would you?
and if you were stopping hackers ... you'd think the gizmo would be in the box ... not outside the house embedded in the step!!
My thanks to all for your answers. I can assure you ACthe Troll that it is not a "wind-up" as I saw the thing with my own eyes and the person is in fact a relative and I know he wouldn't lie about it.
It is my belief that it is some essencial part of the installation and is not put there for any sinister reasons. Furthermore, if you re-read my question, you will see that I never suggested that there was anything sinister about it.
It just seemed odd to me that the device was required.
I'm just interested to know what it's for
It is my belief that it is some essencial part of the installation and is not put there for any sinister reasons. Furthermore, if you re-read my question, you will see that I never suggested that there was anything sinister about it.
It just seemed odd to me that the device was required.
I'm just interested to know what it's for
Ac the troll, or whoever you are, you should be the one to get out more, you obviously take all that is fed to you by the media, are you a sun reader? for your information that chip that has been drilled into the concrete step as described by cockneyguy or whoever .
I also have one but installed in my wall this was done by a sky engineer and I was told it was a radio frequency identification chip (RDIF CHIP) look it up you might learn something instead of making fun of people, DER.... I guess you have never heard of this chip have you, well do your research and then you might have something more constructive to say. needless to say I removed it myself when the engineer had left and the sky channels are still working fine, last time I had the chip it was whizzing across a local river.
I also have one but installed in my wall this was done by a sky engineer and I was told it was a radio frequency identification chip (RDIF CHIP) look it up you might learn something instead of making fun of people, DER.... I guess you have never heard of this chip have you, well do your research and then you might have something more constructive to say. needless to say I removed it myself when the engineer had left and the sky channels are still working fine, last time I had the chip it was whizzing across a local river.
whoever you all are, you should be the one's to get out more, you obviously take all that is fed to you by the media, are you a sun readers? for your information that chip that has been drilled into the concrete step as described by cockneyguy or whoever .
I also have one but installed in my wall this was done by a sky engineer and I was told it was a radio frequency identification chip (RDIF CHIP) look it up you might learn something instead of making fun of people, DER.... I guess you have never heard of this chip have you, well do your research and then you might have something more constructive to say. needless to say I removed it myself when the engineer had left and the sky channels are still working fine, last time I had the chip it was whizzing across a local river.
I also have one but installed in my wall this was done by a sky engineer and I was told it was a radio frequency identification chip (RDIF CHIP) look it up you might learn something instead of making fun of people, DER.... I guess you have never heard of this chip have you, well do your research and then you might have something more constructive to say. needless to say I removed it myself when the engineer had left and the sky channels are still working fine, last time I had the chip it was whizzing across a local river.
ACtheTroll: Remember your question (above)
How does it get power?
This apparently is how.
RFID tags don't have batteries (How could they? They're 1/3 of a millimeter!). Instead, they are powered by the radio signal that wakes them up and requests an answer.
You might like to read the complete article
http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/169
Thanks to orionseye, at last someone gives a logical answer instead just of taking the p1ss
How does it get power?
This apparently is how.
RFID tags don't have batteries (How could they? They're 1/3 of a millimeter!). Instead, they are powered by the radio signal that wakes them up and requests an answer.
You might like to read the complete article
http://www.securityfocus.com/columnists/169
Thanks to orionseye, at last someone gives a logical answer instead just of taking the p1ss