Vasile Surducan wrote: > > +18dBm modulated power in the user brain continuoulsly from WIFI router/laptop > +2W in user brain randomly every time when talking to GSM > + some miliwats every time you're cooking in the microwave oven > > It's not questionable why so many people have brain damage... > And they wander why, after talking 2-3 hours per day on the phone... > :( The absorbed RF is converted into heat, which is readily carried away by the bloodstream. If it's not enough to cauterize your corneas, it's harmless. Just look at the power levels used for RF and ultrasound therapies in physiotheraphist's offices and ask why there aren't hugh cancer rates from THAT energy. The voltage gradients we have across our cell membranes are THOUSANDS of times higher that the voltages induced by outside EM fields. Nothing is 100% safe, but I don't buy ANY of the 'electromagnetic radiation causes cancer' BS. Many years ago, British Electronics World magazine had a series of articles looking at the quality and methods of the studies being done at the time (late 1980's). A lot of OTHER causal factors were ignored in the statistical compliations. e.g. high tension power lines focus gamma rays underneath, so ionizing radiation levels were higher there, so of COURSE the cancer rates were higher. EM is NOT ionizing radiation, but it was getting blamed as the direct cause, even though it wasn't. On study claimed that electric blankets were causing higher rates of miscarriages. NOTHING was done to eliminate the effects of the woman having higher body temperature during gestation, and subsequent studies refuted the claims. I work in the field of Neuroscience, where we study the interactions of muscles and nerves, and I have to record microvolts signals in the presence of millivolts of muscle noise. It's a bitch to get RF into and out of the body for telemetry applications (we're short circuits), so a cell phone or power line EMF is not much to worry about. Robert -- http://www.piclist.com PIC/SX FAQ & list archive View/change your membership options at http://mailman.mit.edu/mailman/listinfo/piclist