On 2008-06-08 09:52 +0100, Roedy Green allegedly wrote:
> On Sun, 08 Jun 2008 04:11:55 +0200, Daniele Futtorovic
> <da.futt.news@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote, quoted or indirectly quoted
> someone who said :
>
>> Eeh? How about using your brain? Do you feel heat when your cellphone
>> rings in your hand?
>
> I don't have a cell phone. I am a virgin. I have never received a call
> on one.
I see. Well, the average phone doesn't become hot when it rings, nor
does it significantly heat its surroundings.
> I did say I figured it had to be a "trick".
You said a good deal more and different than that.
Anyway. That piece of propaganda you multiplied is quite obviously dung.
Cellphones certainly emit electromagnetic waves. That's what they're
for. But those waves' energy is either not high enough to heat anything,
or the wave spectrum isn't appropriate for heating. I don't know enough
electromagnetics to exclude the second, but I strongly suspect the
first. Mind, this doesn't mean they can't do any damage. But not the
kind of damage described here, at any rate.
--
DF.
to reply privately, change the top-level domain
in the FROM address from "invalid" to "net"


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