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Showing posts with label Cellphones and PDAs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cellphones and PDAs. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Cell Phone Radiation New

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How Much Radiation Does Your Phone Emit?

Cellphones emit varying levels of radiation, depending on make and model. (Lisa Poole/Associated Press)The technology news site CNET has compiled two interesting lists showing which cellphones give off the most and the least radiation.
In publishing the information, CNET editors note the data aren’t meant to imply that cellphone radiation poses a risk, nor is it meant to say that the phones are safe. As I recently reported in my Well column last week, the data on cellphone safety is mixed, although a few recent international studies have suggested a link with three types of brain tumors. The Food and Drug Administration also says there’s not enough information to determine conclusively whether cellphones are safe or unsafe.
The charts focus on the specific absorption rate, or SAR, of a cellphone, which is a way of measuring the quantity of radio frequency energy that is absorbed by the body, according to CNET.
For a phone to pass F.C.C. certification, that phone’s maximum SAR level must be less than 1.6 W/kg (watts per kilogram). In Europe, the level is capped at 2 W/kg, while Canada allows a maximum of 1.6 W/kg. The SAR level listed in our charts represents the highest SAR level with the phone next to the ear as tested by the F.C.C. Keep in mind that it is possible for the SAR level to vary between different transmission bands and that different testing bodies can obtain different results. Also, it’s possible for results to vary between different editions of the same phone (such as a handset that’s offered by multiple carriers).
Four Motorola phones top the list, with the V195s putting out the maximum 1.6 W/kg. The popular BlackBerry Curve 8330 rounds out the No. 5 spot. To see the full top 10 list, click here.
The list of lowest-radiation cellphones includes the LG KG800 and the Motorola Razr V3x, which put out 0.135 W/kg and 0.14 W/kg, respectively. To see all the lowest radiation phones, click here.
If you don’t see your phone on the list, the site includes lists of cellphones by brand name. My iPhone was listed under “other” brands, but I was interested to learn that its SAR number is 0.974.
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1.June 11th,
2008
4:36 pm TPP, why should anyone really care? You’re not buying this idiocy that cell phones cause brain cancer, are you???

Between this and your vaccine/autism kick, I think you’ve been reading too much Joseph Mercola. This serves only to whip up unproductive anxiety and to take away the spotlight from prevention issues that really have a solid medical and scientific basis.

— Posted by jack
2.June 11th,
2008
4:46 pm I would be most appreciative if you would do a little research on the issue of using earpieces (not Bluetooth). Do they increase, decrease, or have no effect upon the amount of radiation to the brain. Thanks so much, karen in portland

— Posted by karen berry
3.June 11th,
2008
5:27 pm I think using the word “radiation” is unnecessarily alarmist and will make people think of atomic radiation, which is not produced by cell phones. Many kinds of energy travel as radiation: sound, heat, light, cosmic ray particles, and the electromagnetic waves we use for communication.
How about the more neutral and perfectly accurate “radio waves” or “radio wave energy”?

— Posted by Brian R Stanley, MD
4.June 11th,
2008
6:42 pm Ditto the need for data on earpieces and Bluetooth.

— Posted by Senalishia
5.June 11th,
2008
6:53 pm As Donnie Brasco would have said, forgetaboutit!

Here is, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, one easily avoidable and definitely lethal source of radiation exposure:

“The effective doses from diagnostic CT [computer tomography] procedures are typically estimated to be in the range of 1 to 10 mSv. This range is not much less than the lowest doses of 5 to 20 mSv received by some of the Japanese survivors of the atomic bombs.”

This is what one gets (5 to 10 mSv) while having abdominal CT scan for virtual colonoscopy, angiography, or routine “body scan” in the name of cancer and heart disease prevention.

According to the same source, “A CT examination with an effective dose of 10 millisieverts (abbreviated mSv; 1 mSv = 1 mGy in the case of x rays.) may be associated with an increase in the possibility of fatal cancer of approximately 1 chance in 2000. This increase in the possibility of a fatal cancer from radiation can be compared to the natural incidence of fatal cancer in the U.S. population, about 1 chance in 5.”

This information is provided by the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, and analyzed in depth on my site.

Cell phone me worry? Nope…

Konstantin Monastyrsky

— Posted by Konstantin Monastyrsky
6.June 11th,
2008
7:09 pm Is there a comparable list for cordless phones?

FROM TPP — I don’t know of one although perhaps readers do. I dont’ think we have cordless phones at our ear nearly as much as cell phones.

— Posted by Peter Silverman
7.June 11th,
2008
7:12 pm Cell phone users face more danger plowing into a light pole while driving than they do from the booga booga of cell phone radiation. If this story is, in fact, true, then the people whose brains get cooked from their cell phones a) did not lose much and b) deserved it for driving the rest of us crazy with their yapping in theaters and restaurants.

— Posted by G H Waite
8.June 11th,
2008
7:22 pm What happens to truth when an unreliable source parrots a thought-to-be reliable source? The “in-depth analysis” is sure to be a nightmare.

That being said, with a greater than 1 in 5 risk personally (due to some youthful indiscretions) I’m not too concerned about a theoretical risk from a source without a known mechanism of injury (I’m referring to medium- and long-wave radiation here) like my cellphone.


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A History of Cellular Telephone Development

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Now a days cellular communication has become a part of human life the trends of mobile communication is as follows

1920s - 1940s

Research on frequency characteristics at Bell Labs

Edwin H. Armstrong invents frequency modulation in 1935.

Motorola develops the world's first hand-held portable two-way radio system, the Handie-Talkie.

AT&T introduces a mobile radiotelephone service in St. Louis in 1946. Calling is manual (operator invoked) and is half-duplex (i.e., requires that users "push to talk.").

1947

The cellular concept "materializes from nowhere" at Bell Labs. The use of low powered transmitters in cells permits greater capacity since frequencies can be reused in non-adjacent cells without cross-talk audio interference. The smaller the cells, the more often frequencies can be reused. Handoff is required when mobile units move between cells.

The FCC approves citizens' band radio (CB) service. The rapid expansion of this service and the demand for hand-held CB radio units fueled the development of portable radio units.

1950s

The FCC declines to allocate significant frequencies for mobile radio.

Bell Labs Scientists & Engineers continue low level of investigation into the cellular concept and publish a number of internal papers.

1960s

The FCC denies new spectrum for mobile radio, but convenes the "Advisory Committee for Land Mobile Radio Services" to examine the congestion in land mobile telephony.

AT&T "dusts off" cellular concept and begins serious work on it again.

AT&T develops mobile telephone service for the Amtrak Metroliner. It was a primitive forerunner of today's cellular systems, in which calls were handed off from base to base as the train progressed, triggered by sensors along the tracks.

The FCC opens Docket 18262 (known as the "Cellular Docket")

1970s

The FCC reallocates 115 MHz in the upper portion of the TV UHF band and sets aside new frequencies (64 MHz) for "land mobile communication." A decade of legal disputes over who gets what ensues.

The FCC authorizes AT&T to test the cellular concept in real urban conditions in Newark and Philadelphia.

Patent 3663762, MOBILE COMMUNICATION SYSTEM, applied for by Bell Labs.

Bell Labs files its classic "High-Capacity Mobile Telephone System Feasibility Studies and System Plan" report to the FCC. The report covered not only the technology of a cellular system, but service features, coverage, capacity growth, customer opinions on quality, and costs as well.

Bell Labs develops a microprocessor- based handoff system with fully digital switching. Low-cost frequency synthesizers are also developed.

The FCC grants experimental licenses and decides to authorize construction of two developmental systems: one in Chicago (licensed to Illinois Bell) and a second serving Baltimore, Md. and Washington, DC (licensed to American Radio Telephone Service Inc. (ARTS), now Cellular One, in partnership with Motorola).

The first commercial cellular system is installed in Tokyo by NTT in 1979.

1980s

The Nordic countries introduce a mobile phone system similar to AMPS in 1981.

The FCC adopts rules creating a commercial cellular radio telephone service.

On October 13, 1983, the pilot commercial cellular system of Illinois Bell begins operating in Chicago. The second pilot system run by ARTS in partnership with Motorola begins operation in Baltimore/Washingto n on December 16, 1983.

By 1984, Washington, DC has two competing cellular providers,

By 1988, many cellular systems (particularly New York and Los Angeles) are already becoming overloaded as the promise of nearly infinite expansion of capacity from cell splitting turns out to be more costly and difficult than foreseen.

1990s

Cellular construction permits have been issued for at least one system in every market in the United States.

1992

Cellular Subscriber count tops 10 million.

1994

Bell Labs engineers Joel Engel and Richard Frenkiel win National Medal of Technology for their work in cellular telephony.

Irwin Jacobs, CEO of Qualcomm, wins the National Medal of Technology for Qualcomm's development of CDMA.

1995

Cellular Subscriber count tops 25 million.

The PCS frequency bands are approved by the FCC(Federal communication Commission)
, launching new competitors to existing cellular systems.

1997

Cellular Subscriber count tops 50 million
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Monday, November 23, 2009

Acer Liquid Android Phone Review

Acer Liquid Android PhoneAcer has recently announced a new addition to their Acer cell phone family, the Acer Liquid which is a stunning phone with unique design and high technical features. The phone comes with an interactive touch display screen of type TFT (Thin Film Transistor). The 3.5 inches screen features an amazing resolution of 480 x 320 pixels with 256k colors for sharp display quality.

With the built-in accelerometer, the users need to worry about adjusting the position of the display as phone has the innovative auto-rotate feature. The proximity sensor of the phone can be turned on or off according to the requirement of the users.

The Acer Liquid also features an Ambient Light Sensor that helps to maintain a superior display quality and sufficient amount of brightness. The stunning new Acer Liquid is loaded with bundles of other features and technical specification like:
  • Android version 1.6 (Donut) Operating system for a user interactive environment
  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 8250 CPU with 768 MHz processor for high end processing speed and easy mobile computing
  • 256MB RAM and 512MB ROM for boosting application speed and overall performance
  • A 5 mega pixel camera with advanced features like auto-focus, Geo tagging and LED flash for an outstanding image quality. The images feature a high anti-blur resolution of 2560 x 1920 pixels. The video recording feature of type QVGA is also availed with the camera.
  • Connectivity features like Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP and miniUSB

The startling new Acer Liquid will be available in Black, White and Red color. The phone is expected to hit the markets by November 2009.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Fancy cellphone runs Windows XP

Windows XP

Cellphones are evolving into pint-size PCs, and this xpPhone from Chinese company ITG is the latest extreme example. This Windows XP-running slider started out as a murky demo at a trade show, and now the company is offering it for preorder at an as-yet-undisclosed price.

Its 4.8-inch 800x480 touch screen is almost big enough to be a digital picture frame, and it has two drives — an 8GB solid-state drive and a 30GB spinning hard disk. The company tried to put everything into this AMD Super Mobile CPU-running phone, including Wi-Fi, connectivity to any US cell network, Bluetooth, VGA output and the ability to use it as an external hard disk.

Windows XP

Too bad it's heavy as an anvil, weighing 2 ounces shy of a pound. That's hefty enough to pull your pants down if you want to pocket the thing. Its stated battery life could be an exaggeration, boasting talk time of five hours. Wonder how long that "Internet experience" will last with its lithium-ion battery.

Windows XP

Slim this down to about half its thickness and weight, and install Windows 7, and you could be looking at the phone/computer of the future.

Friday, October 16, 2009

Phone That Shames The Weather Bureau

Gadgets

I don’t know about your city, but the weather bureau of my hometown is often sniggered at, for their in-accurate predictions. When they say it will rain (like they predicted a couple of days ago) you can be sure it will be bright and sunny. I would like to gift them this “Window Phone”, that makes accurate predictions and even changes its display to reflect the climatic conditions outdoors. Maybe I should keep the phone for myself and bug the bureau with my updates.

Gadgets

Gadgets

Gadgets

Gadgets

7 Ultra Luxury Mobile Phones

Luxury

1 Million Euro Cell Phone
Euroset, one of largest mobile handset retailers in Russia, plans to open a GoldVish boutique in Moscow next year. The GoldVish Le Million phone, the world’s most expensive cellphone, made the Guinness…


Dial Home With the Help of Diamonds and Gold
The mobile phone has become a status symbol for many, but since just about everyone has one these days, those looking to flaunt their affluence are upgrading to ultra luxury mobile phones and jewel-encrusted mobile devices. This cluster examines some of the most luxurious communication gadgets, from diamond headsets to jewel-encrusted ultra luxury mobile phones. Phoning home never looked so glam!

Luxury


$20,000 Blackberry Case Given Away at CES
Rosa Capacola - Want to be even more addicted to your Crackberry? Case-Mate has introduced its diamond-studded BlackBerry case decorated with a coating of 3.5 carats of diamonds and 15 grams of gold. It is priced at…

 Luxury Mobile Phones

$176,400 iPhone

andreea vrabie - You thought Amosu's $41,225 iPhone was ridiculous? Peter Aloisson, an Austrian luxury designer, has recently created the most expensive iPhone in the world (til now, I say this is only the beginning).…

 Luxury Mobile Phones

2 in 1 Luxury Mobiles

Ayman Helweh - Not to be outdone by Prada, Giorgio Armani or Dolce & Gabbana who recently had their own branded phones, Christian Dior unveiled a line of fashion mobile phones targeting the brand-obsessed consumers with…

 Luxury Mobile Phones

$10,000 Blinged Mobiles

Rose Nazarali - Vera Wang took a plain old Blackberry flip phone and transformed it into a $10,000 masterpiece. The infamous designer used Swarovski crystals to adorn the Blackberry Pearl Flip 8230 in the perfect amount…

 Luxury Mobile Phones

$108,880 iPhone Shells

Shelby Lee Walsh - For those of you who would like to add a little flash to your iPhone 3G, German label GnG has created a luxury phone cover that is comprised of 18-carat gold and then filled with 200 diamonds. On top of…

 Luxury Mobile Phones

24 Carat iPhone Cases

Andrew Robichaud - Having the iPhone isn’t luxurious enough anymore. The accessories that go with it are what push it over the top, and the Sayn Design gold iPhone case is the cream of the crop. The Sayn Design gold iPhone…

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Cell Phones of the Future

You think your Razr's cool? When it comes to mobile phone design, you ain't seen nothin' yet.

Clamshells and candy bars be gone. Tomorrow's cell phones may bear little resemblance to the snap-open handsets or even the sleek, flat rectangular phones we sport today.

Visionaries from design firm Pilotfish and sensor maker Synaptics have created a phone that has no buttons. It's operated with gestures. Designer Manon Maneenawa has built a phone that can be converted into an alarm clock or a wrist watch. Sweden's GoldVish just began selling a phone for $1.26 million that features diamonds and a secret compartment.

























Tuesday, September 15, 2009

CASID G555 - - Wrist Watch


Check out the CASID G555+, it is a watchphone that comes with 1.2 inch display screen, 1.3-megapixel camera, integrated audio and video player, FM radio, Bluetooth, microSD slot and a compass. The watch is removable from the band. It also has the basic functions such as calculator, calendar, memo and alarm. The CASID G555+ is running on GSM 900 / 1800 MHz . More pictures after the break


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