Seems like you may have a use for those special flat speakers that use the wall to produce the sound Attach to the wall, and then put sound insulation over your side of them to keep your own sanity
Best is to record, and playback the noise from his place, Alternatively you could generate your own low frequency notes with an intermittent squeal into the higher ranges Computer controlled to play for short periods at random times should get the dog going if nothing else. But do check the local laws and residence restrictions first JimB ----- Original Message ----- From: "Rich Koziol" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, January 11, 2006 2:15 AM Subject: Re: Wireless Signal Stealing > On 10 Jan 2006 at 17:51, Claudia Satori wrote: > > > Oh I have asked this neighbor to stop his dog from barking, not play drums > > in rooms with common walls to mine. can't even imagine the repercussions of > > asking him to stop stealing my signal, which I just found out today is a > > federal offense - and this is being done on a FBI laptop. He will say it is > > my fault for having a signal available to him. > > You mean he works FBI? What a personality. I thought these guys > were polite, well groomed and generally friendly :-) > > Rich > > -- > ---------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, mailto: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Is your picture included in the Official Win-Home List Members Profiles Page? > http://www.besteffort.com/winhome/Profiles.html > If not, write to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- ---------------------------------------- To Change your email Address for this list, send the following message: CHANGE WIN-HOME your_old_address your_new_address to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Note carefully that both old and new addresses are required.
