Posts Tagged “Mobile Phone”

Interphone Witnesses testified about research into cell phone use and its potential impact on human health, as well as the potential side effects such as brain cancer and salivary gland tumors.

YouTube Preview Image

Source: Dr Magda Havas PhD

Most people are not aware of the damage that can be done by a cell/mobile phone. It is NOT the carrier that does the damage to your DNA but the information transmitted. Please review or other EMR posts on this blog for further evidence

EMR CAN be reduced to safe levels in the human system by a few methods.

  • Reduce Distance from the source or the EMR (not always possible
  • Reduce Exposure time
  • Apply EMR absorbing or Harmonizing Devices to the source
  • Wear EMR Absorbing or Harmonizing Devices on your person
  • Manage your home or workplace with Environmental Harmonization

See Also: Dr Magda Havas | Fosdac | Trius Technology | Amega Global |

Comments Comments Off

Live blood cells become sticky and clump together (rouleaux formation) when I use a computer or a mobile phone. This type of analysis may be useful for diagnosing people with electrohypersensitivity

YouTube Preview Image

Source: www.MagdaHavas.com

Want to Reduce or Eliminate the Effects of EMR?

Watch how the rouleaux (stacking of the red blood cells) can be reduced or even eliminated with a simple spray in the mouth. (purchase)

Purchase an EMR Reducing Opal BioPendant, BioChip or Pulse8 from Trius Technology

“That which is looked upon by one generation as the apex of human knowledge is often considered an absurdity by the next, and that which is regarded as a superstition in one century, may form the basis of science for the following one.” – Attributed to Paracelsus

Comments Comments Off

This week marked yet another milestone in the internet becoming mobile, when the five billionth mobile subscription added to the count, largely thanks to emerging markets like India and China.

According to Ericsson estimates, based on industry information, the five billionth subscription was added on 8 July.

In the year 2000, about 720 million people had mobile subscriptions, less than the amount of users China, alone, has today.

Mobile broadband subscriptions are growing at similar pace and are expected to amount to more than 3.4 billion by 2015 (from 360 million in 2009). Studies show that soon 80% of all people accessing the internet will be doing so using their mobile device.

For some it’s a question of convenience, for others a necessity. Mobile subscriptions allow people who don’t have access to a bank or a bank account to transfer money; fishermen and farmers can get quick updates on sudden changes in the weather forecast, villagers to get local medical care, and children to access online education. It facilitates daily operations of small businesses and drives economic growth.

In more mature markets, connected devices rather than people, are driving the increase in network traffic. According to Ericsson’s vision we will reach 50 billion connections within this decade.

The communication landscape is changing rapidly and, in December of last year, another milestone was reached, when the amount of data traffic carried over mobile networks exceeded the amount of traffic generated from voice calls.

Machine-to-machine communications, or M2M, will be a key component in the future growth of the mobile industry. For energy companies it could be smart meters that read themselves, increase business efficiency and cut operational expenses. In transportation – tracking solutions improve route optimisation and safety for vehicles on the road. Digital signs that can be updated remotely, cameras that can send pictures halfway around the world and even a soda machine that requests restocking when needed are other examples that machine-to-machine technology make possible.

“The degree of connectivity in the world has grown by a factor of 10 over the last decade and we forecast it will increase a further tenfold over the next decade. In 2000, there were 0.5 billion connections in the world, primarily wireline, connecting places to places. Now there are over 5 billion connections, primarily wireless, connecting people to people. In 2020, we expect there will be 50 billion, connecting things to things. Anything that can benefit from having a connection will have one,” said Warren Chaisatien, Strategic Marketing Manager, Ericsson Australia/NZ.

“Australian mobile broadband growth continues unabated, with user numbers expected to reach 3.2 million in mid-2010. At 15% of the population, Australia remains a mobile broadband world leader, currently ranked third, globally, behind Austria and Sweden.

“The Australian mobile broadband market is now entering its second wave, where one size no longer fits all, mobile broadband is complementing fixed broadband rather than cannibalising it, and prepaid and smartphones are fast emerging to join dongles. Service innovation, product differentiation and user experience – rather than pricing – will be the key factors going forward.”

Source: Voice & Data

Comments No Comments »

A growing body of evidence, dating back to the 1960s, suggests that brain tumors may be only one of the many health problems produced by our new wireless society will produce.

Cell-phone technology “could lead to a health crisis similar to those caused by asbestos, smoking, and lead in petrol,” warned the European Union’s environmental watchdog agency in 2007.

The most ambitious attempt to catalogue the health risks of cell phones to date is the industry-funded Interphone study, carried out by researchers from 13 different countries (not including the United States). Although the study has been criticized for selecting data in a way designed to play down the risks of cell phone use, it continues to turn up alarming findings nonetheless.

Among the findings so far are a 40 percent increase in brain tumor risk among adults who use a cell phone for 10 years (especially on the side of the head where the phone is held); a 300 percent increased risk of acoustic nerve tumors; and an increased risk of tumors of the parotid gland. The risk of a brain tumor increases by 400 percent in people who start using a cell phone before the age of 20.

Other studies, mostly out of Europe, have linked mobile phone and personal digital assistant (PDA) use to DNA damage, sperm death, and brain damage including early-onset dementia. These findings regularly make big news in the international press, but are by and large played down in U.S. media.

The United States has a long history of hostility toward the claim that the microwave radiation used by microwave ovens, cell phones, cell phone towers and wireless internet (Wi-Fi) can be harmful to human health. U.S. law prohibits challenging the placement of cell phone towers on health grounds, and an industry group (the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) is highly influential in setting exposure standards.

The first research on the risks of microwave radiation was actually uncovered by a U.S. researcher, Allan Frey, in the 1960s. Frey discovered that “nonionizing” electromagnetic radiation — previously thought to be harmless — could still produce biological effects. For example, radar waves can produce “sound” even in the absence of actual sound waves by interfering with the brain’s own electromagnetic signals. Frey found that microwaves could damage the organs of lab animals, even stopping their hearts completely.

Yet when Frey published a paper showing that microwave radiation could disrupt the functioning of the blood-brain barrier, the Office of Naval Research ordered him to conceal the work or lose funding. Pentagon-funded scientists claimed they had refuted his work, but refused to share any information on their data or methods.

Frey found that while the primary (or “carrier”) wave of microwave radiation can cause health problems, the secondary wave that carries the actual data — whether sound, text, pictures or other information transmitted via cell phones or Wi-Fi connections — is far more dangerous. The more data streams carried, the higher the danger.

Modern research supports these early findings, with 75 percent of independently funded studies showing health risks from cell phone radiation (in contrast with only 25 percent of industry funded studies). Researchers have also documented dramatic rises in the rate of numerous health problems immediately following the introduction of widespread Wi-Fi and cell phone networks across Europe.

Such concerns have led European governments to consider banning Wi-Fi in government facilities, and to the Austrian Medical Association’s call for a ban on Wi-Fi in schools. The national library of France has already removed all Wi-Fi connections due to health concerns.

In certain segments of the U.S. population, awareness is also growing. According to an anonymous investment banker speaking to a GQ reporter, rates of brain tumors among financial executives are shockingly high, a fact more and more people are attributing to constant cell phone use.

“I knew four or five people just at my firm who got tumors,” the banker said. “Each time, people ask the question. I hear it in the hallways.”

Sources for this story include:
Natural News
www.gq.com

[Opinion/Comment from Glenn]

A good friend of mine was a mobile phone dealer and was on the phone nearly 12 hours per day. He had 2 to use phones because the batteries would always die before he could get the phone recharged. I told him he was an accident waiting to happen but he said he was fine and on top of life. On his 47th birthday he collapsed in the bathroom.

In the hospital emergency they diagnosed a brain tumor near his right ear the size of a golf ball. He held his phone to his right ear. They removed it with surgery. I got him on an extreme nutritional program. He started to improve and got out of hospital earlier than the doctors expected. He stopped the nutrition, relapsed and died a month later.

Make amends now. Put biochips on your phone, computer, tv and anything that generates EMR. Wear a biopendant to absorb spurious EMR from devices that do not have biochips on them.

Energy Medicine Devices, Biochips & Pendants

[End Opinion]

Comments Comments Off

http://www.digitalmedia-world.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2253:apple-iphone-4-brings-video-calling-and-hd-video&catid=40:web-design-development&Itemid=57

Apple presents the new iPhone 4 with FaceTime, permitting video calling. The iPhone 4 features a 5 megapixel camera with LED flash and HD video recording.

The 3.5 inch Retina display has 960 x 640 pixels resulting in sharper, smoother and more realistic text, images and video. The iPhone 4 is only 9.3mm thick, and the new 5 megapixel autofocus camera with a 5x digital zoom, backside illuminated sensor and built-in LED flash allows pictures even in low light environments. iPhone 4 also records and edits HD video and the tap to focus feature now works while recording video. You can use the iPhone 4‘s LED flash for both still photography and video recording. The new iMovie app for iPhone lets you combine movie clips, add dynamic transitions and themes and include photos and music.

iPhone 4 has access to apps on the App Store. Every iPhone 4 has a built-in 3-axis gyro that when combined with the accelerometer provides 6-axis motion sensing such as up and down, side to side, forward and backward and pitch and roll. Developers can access the gyro using the new CoreMotion API to make games and other apps.

iPhone 4 comes with iOS 4, the new version of the mobile operating system with over 100 new features including Multitasking, Folders, enhanced Mail, deeper Enterprise support and Apple’s new iAd mobile advertising platform. The new iBooks app will be available for iPhone 4 as a free download from the App Store and includes Apple’s new iBookstore. iBooks users can also now read and store PDFs in iBooks.

iPhone 4 delivers seven hours of talk time on 3G networks, up to 10 hours of web browsing on Wi-Fi and up to six hours on 3G, and up to 10 hours of video playback and up to 40 hours of audio playback. It 4 is powered by Apple’s new A4 processor and has a second microphone to suppress unwanted background noise for improved call quality when in loud places. Included is 802.11n Wi-Fi networking and quad-band HSUPA to provide 7.2Mbps downlink and 5.8Mbps uplink capability.

iPhone 4 will roll out worldwide to 88 countries by the end of September and will be available by the end of July in Australia, New Zealand, much of western Europe, Singapore and South Korea. www.apple.com

Comments Comments Off

Eavesdropping Webcams, spying ISPs, toxic PCs, and more. Here are 21 dangers that the industry is hiding from you–and what you can do about them.

Dan Tynan – Mar 30, 2010 1:00 pm

Yes, the truth is out there. But they don’t want you to know about it.

Who’s “they”? It could be Google or product manufacturers, your boss or your wireless carrier, Hollywood or Uncle Sam.

What don’t they want you to know? That your cell phone, your Webcam, and your employer may be spying on you. That you’re probably paying too much for printer ink, and that your wicked-cool subsidized handset will cost you way more over time than an unsubsidized one. That your PC may be coated with toxic flame retardants. And that’s just for starters.

Don’t despair. For every dirty little secret revealed herein, we describe a fix or a way to work around it (if any exists). You don’t have to be a victim, if you know what to do.

Just remember: You’ve been warned.

Your ISP Is a Copyright Cop

The RIAA and the MPAA may have a new ally. The next people who bust you for illegally swapping music and movies could be the folks you pay for Internet access.

Illustration: Barry Blitt
The recording and film industries are seeking to manipulate upcoming net neutrality legislation to allow ISPs to scan the bits passing through their networks and to block any that may violate copyrights–similar to Comcast’s notorious attempts to throttle BitTorrent connections in 2007. The Federal Communications Commission’s recommended rule changes already contain an exception for “reasonable network management,” which could include sniffing for copyrighted content, says Jennifer Granick, civil liberties director for the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Meanwhile, according to leaked reports, the international Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA) now being negotiated in private sessions contains provisions requiring ISPs to police their own networks for copyright scofflaws. Critics of the proposed treaty fear that copyright holders will insert a “three-strikes” policy, under which users could have their Internet access revoked if they’re caught exchanging copyrighted content more than twice.

“It’s dangerous giving so much power to copyright claims,” says Wendy Seltzer, project leader for the Chilling Effects Clearinghouse and a Fellow at Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society. “Imagine someone telling you, ‘If you violate our copyrights, we can terminate your Net connection, not just your blog.’”

With such a powerful new partner playing the role of both investigator and enforcer, might copyright holders be emboldened to pursue more consumers suspected of violating copyrights? And what protections will consumers have against false claims of infringement?

The Fix: Contact your congressional representatives and tell them that you oppose net neutrality loopholes for content filtering. Support organizations such as Chilling Effects, the EFF, and Public Knowledge, which fight laws that turn ISPs into Hollywood’s hired guns.

Cell Phones Don’t Crash Airplanes

The Federal Communications Commission and the Federal Aviation Administration have each recommended that airlines not allow passengers to use cell phones during commercial flights. The FAA fears that the RF signal emitted by devices using the 800MHz spectrum band might interfere with the navigation systems of the plane, specifically GPS instrumentation. Yet there is no documented case of an air accident or serious malfunction caused by a cell phone’s interfering with a plane’s navigation system.

Read More on PC World

—————————————————-

Comments Comments Off

4gWirelessA 4G Wireless World

The world of wireless and mobile communications is on the verge of a new revolution–a 4G wireless broadband revolution. But the blazing super fast speed offered by 4G systems (100Mbps and faster) is not the “Che Guevara” in the revolutionary world of 4G technology. Companies that produce content running at 4G speeds are the future of mobile communications.

Think of it this way. Carriers or operators are the conduits (the “pipes” in Internet terms) and handset manufacturers the “appliances,” similar to utility companies delivering electricity, gas and water and appliance manufacturers producing refrigerators, furnaces and dishwashers.

Read More: http://mobilebeyond.net/why-4g-wireless-broadband-content-providers-are-the-future-of-mobile/

Comments No Comments »

During 2008-09, Australians continued to demonstrate their thirst for flexible communications.

Take-up continued across a range of platforms and technologies, with the use of 3G mobile and wireless broadband services growing by 162%.

At the same time, general internet use continues to grow and diversify strongly, with Australians downloading ever-increasing amounts of data and more people going online for business and personal transactions.

These are some of the highlights of the Australian Communications and Media Authority’s Communications Report 2008-09, released in January.

“Digital convergence is well and truly with us,” said Chris Chapman, Chairman of the ACMA. “During 2008-09, Australians continued to adopt new communication and media services and adapt their usage patterns to meet their specific lifestyle needs.

Services such as 3G, VoIP and wireless broadband internet are being increasingly used, with factors such as lifestyle, age and family type shaping these choices.”

Australians increasingly seek flexibility in where and how they access communications and content.

The number of mobile phone services increased by 9.5% in 2008-09 to 24.22 million, while wireless broadband services grew strongly increasing 162% to reach 2.1 million services as at 30 June 2009. This contrasts with the number of fixed-line telephone services, which declined by 3% to 10.67 million.

Other key findings from the report include:

  • Growth in mobile services has been driven by a continuing surge in the take-up of 3G mobiles, with 12.28 million services in operation at June 2009 compared with 8.55 million at June 2008, reflecting in part increased 3G network coverage and handset functionality.
  • The growing importance of mobile networks as a revenue source was demonstrated in 2008-09, with all major carriers reporting mobile network revenue exceeding revenue from the public switched telephone network (PSTN).
  • There were 8.4 million internet subscribers in Australia at June 2009, up from 7.2 million at June 2008. Nearly 80% of Australians have an internet service at home, most of which (90%) are broadband enabled. Broadband (non dial-up) internet subscribers have risen from 5.66 million to 6.72 million.
  • Wireless broadband subscribers accounted for 25% of all internet subscribers at June 2009, up from 11% at June 2008.
  • During the June quarter of 2009, Australians downloaded 99,993 terabits of data compared with 55,434 terabits during the same period in 2008, a staggering 80% increase. Australians also viewed 46.6 billion web pages from home compared with 38.9 billion in 2008.
  • Online data and information services generated $1.37 billion in revenue during 2008-09 while online advertising expenditure increased by 27% to reach $1.7 billion at the end of 2008.

Source: Voice & Data

Comments No Comments »

SAN FRANCISCO – Every cell phone sold in San Francisco could soon come with a label detailing the level of radiation you will be exposed to by using it and recommending a headset to avoid radiation exposure.

If a proposal endorsed Monday by the Commission on the Environment’s policy committee – and preliminarily supported by the mayor – moves forward, not only would consumers be alerted of potential risks of cell phone radiation, but it could become illegal to promote the
devices in public schools, and the federal government would be officially called upon to change their standards for cell phones.

The committee’s 3-0 vote came in response to some scientific studies that suggest cell phone radiation can, over long periods of time, cause brain tumors on the side of the brain where the phone is held, and men who carry cell phones in their pocket may experience lower sperm counts.

Read the complete article here:
http://www.sfexaminer.com/local/Law-would-require-cell-phone-warnings-79284337.html

Glenn’s Comment: Sooner or later this will be become law all over the world when to scinece catches up to general knowledge. If you are seekeing solutions to EMR radiation (energy toxin) then visit my Energy Medicine website www.ClubMedec.com

Comments 1 Comment »