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Hi there, I just introduced SlickyNotes to my company -- where static electricity causes Post-It-like squares to attach to a wall or glass and be able to be moved around very easily. They're great for visualizations of things.
The problem I've discovered is that the wall I'm using doesn't seem to have much static electricity. HackADay had a post on this project.
If I was to say glue one of these plates to the middle of my wall and turn it on, would it pass the static electricity across the entire wall surface? (there would probably be attenuation proportional to distance)
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
Hi there, I just introduced SlickyNotes to my company -- where static electricity causes Post-It-like squares to attach to a wall or glass and be able to be moved around very easily. They're great for visualizations of things.
The problem I've discovered is that the wall I'm using doesn't seem to have much static electricity. HackADay had a post on this project.
If I was to say glue one of these plates to the middle of my wall and turn it on, would it pass the static electricity across the entire wall surface? (there would probably be attenuation proportional to distance)
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: