In 2013, Austrian industrial designer introduced a concept device called the Sono . It was designed to solve one of the most frustrating problems of modern urban living: inescapable, intrusive noise pollution.
Because the video for the Sono looked incredibly convincing and frequently goes viral on social media platforms like TikTok, Instagram, and Facebook, many have stolen Rudolf Stefanich's original 2013 renders. They use the footage to sell cheap, fake plastic knock-offs claiming to do the exact same thing. rudolf stefanich sono buy
If you see a website offering to sell you a small pebble-like device that sticks to your window to cancel outside noise, —it is a fraudulent listing using stolen concept art. In 2013, Austrian industrial designer introduced a concept
Despite a slick promotional video showing a working model and the massive amount of press it received, the Sono that you could purchase. They use the footage to sell cheap, fake
: A sleek, pebble-shaped device designed to be stuck directly onto a glass window.
: Instead of just playing music, the device would read external vibrations hitting the glass and emit counter-vibrations to actively cancel out the noise—effectively turning your entire window into a massive set of active noise-canceling headphones.