> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:hum-
> [email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected]
> Sent: Wednesday, 17 December 2008 8:27 p.m.
.
> >
> > Mobile phone transmitters are radio transmitters - nothing more
> nothing
> > less.
> >
> > They often have narrow beam up/downlinks that operate at microwave
> > frequencies, and sometimes UHF.
> >
> > geoff
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Absolute bollocks!
> Mobile phone networks and  do not work in the same way as standard
> radio or tv broadcasting. Mobile phone networks pulse, the others
> don't.

Bollocks to you too. RF is RF. Digital or analogue. The 'pulsing' of digital
TV, phone networks, and others is no more 'pulsing' than your computer
modem.  And no more 'pulsing' than analogue TV frame and line synch - in
fact far LESS so.

However your mobile phone handset does give off bursts of rf that are not
continuous when polled for 'stay alive', or when a call is initiated or
received. The (very) local rf level is higher from your handset-only, during
a call. The rest of the time, the radiated rf from the handset is pretty
much constant and minimal. The rf from the network is always constant, and
minimal except very close to a cell-site.

But of course, they control my mind.  But seemingly not yours.  They must be
crap at it.

geoff


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