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/sci/ - Science & Math


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4080826 No.4080826 [Reply] [Original]

I didn't know if here or /g/ was the right place to ask.

Anyway, here's the catch. I'm at the computer using some crappy headphones, and i noticed every time my bare feet touched the ground directly (there's no rug, just cold marble) there would be a slight fuzzy sound produced on the earbuds. Tried with a toe, it worked, tried with both feet, and same happened. Tried with my hands, nothing happened.

What's going on? I'm curious. Am i closing or opening some kind of make-shift circuit whenever my feet touch the ground directly?

Oh and if put some rubber sandals between,and they stop the fuzz, which shows there's gotta be a small current at work.

>> No.4080827

It's aliens.

>> No.4080828

Buy some carpet you poor fucker

>> No.4080833
File: 19 KB, 461x403, it's always those pesky aliens.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
4080833

>>4080827

>> No.4080849

>>4080826
Something's not grounded. If it's your headphones then it's fine and you can just get some new ones, if it's your PC then you're lucky you haven't been electrocuted.

>> No.4080869

>>4080828
>poor fucker
>feet touching marble

>people with marble floors are poor

makes sense to me

>> No.4080885

>>4080828
enjoy your carpet radiation

OP, it is possible that magnetic field of other components is effecting the sound chip