School Uniform To Block Cell Phone Emissions 153
Foehg writes "ForeignPolicy.com reports, 'A Belarusian textile company has developed a special school uniform that protects kids from electromagnetic radiation emanating from their cellphones. The uniform features a dedicated pocket that can store the phone and make it safe for those who wear it.'" Now someone has to create an oven mitt that can protect you from the harmful radiation given off by your microwave oven.
I think this could be potentially good. (Score:5, Insightful)
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I think he was just being a grammar Nazi regarding the use of the word emissions vs. transmissions.
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That would be semantics nazi you insensitive clod!
Your geek card please.
Re:I think this could be potentially good. (Score:5, Insightful)
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This is Belarus, the country worst-affected by the Chernobyl disaster. It's not unreasonable for them to be wary of radiation after all the damage it's done to their people. AFAIK we don't know for sure whether mobile phone radiation can cause lasting damage, especially to children.
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AFAIK we don't know for sure whether mobile phone radiation can cause lasting damage, especially to children.
Yes we do, and no it doesn't. 2GHz is the right frequency to warm your body slightly (at 2-3W during xmit, woohoo), but it can't cause cancer like the sun does. Meanwhile, those who worry about cell phones killing them probably like being outside.
RFID blocker? (Score:2)
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Although hopefully those kids smart enough to figure that out would also be smart enough not to shop lift.
That presumes a correlation between intelligence and honesty.
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That presumes a correlation between intelligence and honesty.
No it assumes a correlation between understanding risk vs. reward and intelligence. Risking your future by getting a criminal conviction does not sound like a good idea if the reward is a DVD.
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"smart enough not to" not get caught "shop lift"-ing
Fixed that for you.
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Or they follow directions and just don't bring them to school.
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And if you're one of the fictional people who really do just have their cell phone for emergencies or use after school, the feature you're looking for is the "power" button.
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I'm not sure there are many students at schools with uniforms who also have a job where they're on-call 24x7...
Great! (Score:3, Insightful)
This is great news for all of those students going to schools that permit them to carry cell phones.
Wait, what?
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This is great news for all of those students going to schools that permit them to carry cell phones.
Wait, what?
My son's elementary school lets the teachers decide whether or not students may bring cell phones to class. So far, most of them do allow them.
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Good news. While I think cells are a bit overused by kids today, if I was a parent I'd want my kids to keep a cell on them for emergencies. Make it a disciplinary issue for kids using them when they shouldn't, but don't ban them outright like many schools do.
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Re:Great! (Score:5, Insightful)
No it's not. It's never about protecting the children.
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i wish i had mod points.
well put.
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More of a marketing scam i'm guessing.
No company does anything for any other reason than to make money. Nothing really wrong with that but when you start claiming 'it's for the children' people need to realize you're full of it. Honestly this is just a tin-foil hat for mommy and daddies little gift to humanity.
Fear based marketing is just plan wrong.
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!!! Good News Everybody !!!!!
Be the first on your block to have the new improved Safety Bag(tm)!
Not only does it allow you to safely carry your cellphone in your pocket but it's now removable as well!
You asked me to 'Thing of the Children' and I did!!!! And I'm getting rich off it bitches!
Get yours today for only $39.99 each!
http://www.consultbc.com/stuff/TheSafetyBag.jpg [consultbc.com] (Yes it's perfectly safe to view - honest)
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The most effective way of reducing electromagnetic radiation from cellphones is to turn them off. The second most effective method is to install a femtocell in each classroom, allowing the cellphones to reduce the signal strength to almost nothing. A braindead method is to add lots of material which blocks cellphone transmissions, causing all cellphones to increase the output signal strength.
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Yes but you see this new method pulls lots of power from the cellphones battery so it indeed protects the children in that they will have to buy new batteries for their phones every few months or if worse comes to worse said batteries explode killing them....
Good news everybody! We just saved all of the children by killing them ourselves...
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But if you arrange the tin foil, or whatever it is, so that the phone is outside the tin-foil shielding area when inside the pocket, then the phone will still work, but the rays from it won't hit the body.
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this post is NOT about blocking calls, it is about protecting kids from electromagnetic radiation.
Mobile phones use power control so if you try and block the signal path you just end up forcing them to transmit at higher power and/or losing communication completely.
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Cell phones in elementary school? Seriously?
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To answer your question about the USA. The numbers should should be about right (perhaps off by 1 year). At least where I live there's a cut-off like "You must turn X yrs old between September and June" (or something
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So a lot of kids at elementary school have cellphones. At that point question is "Should they be allowed in school or not" and thus "Is there any benefit from that?". The answer is, yes there is.
Should they be allowed in schools is one question, should they be allowed in class is another. The answer to the first one is yes, because it's obviously beneficial for parents and children to be able to communicate. The answer to the latter is no, because in general they serve no educational purpose, and a child
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Or the gunman. They could also ask the earth quake to shake the debris off their locker so they coul
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Yeah, I'm not going to allow crazed gunmen to determine school policy in the classroom. That's a really, really weak reason to allow a class-disrupting device into the class. In the same situation, couldn't the teacher pull out their cell phone and make the same call? Oh but right, I'm sure in this scenario the teacher was gunned down already, her cell phone fell and broke, the gunmen cut the land-line to the school so the traditional phone on her desk doesn't work, yet all the other students in the room
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Or you could... (Score:2, Informative)
Turn your phone off? Take the battery out?
Can a teacher not confiscate a cell phone anymore if he catches a student using it?
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How long since you been in a school? Policing such policies is a waste of time and effort. If kids really want to bring in cell phones, they will. Something built into uniforms would allow for policing that doesn't requires effort. Of course, this won't stop the cell phones in kid's backpack unless the backpack is part of the uniform.
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It's going to be just as much of an issue of policing the kids to keep their cell phones in their clothes as it is to keep them from using it.
The idea of "using the uniform to enforce the no-cell-phone policy" is ridiculous, and will be exploited at every turn. I mean if I kid pulls out his phone to READ a text message... Then its not going to be in his uniform!
And the article states
The uniform features a dedicated pocket that can store the phone and make it safe for those who wear it.
The phone is unsafe? Unsafe how? Protecting kids from radiation? Stopping it from ringing in class? Like I said. Turnz it off.
This could be marginally useful to prevent ringing (Score:4, Interesting)
This is a pretty long string of "ifs", but it might be an idea for that Iowa schools that wants to use technical means to cut down on phone use during class.
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Hey! This is America! We don't do things like that anymore!
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Unless it's zero tolerance for aspirin or metal spoons.
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if it blocks the radiation effectively enough to prevent reception sufficiently
I would not wear even if it did do that.
Reason: when phone is about to lose (or loses) contact with BTS the phone will increase TX power in order to avoid that. This can easily make situation (radiation dose) even worse.
Is it me (Score:3, Funny)
Is it me, or is the scientific knowledge of these school officials even worse than the slashdot crowd?
Is it : (Score:1, Funny)
should read "Is it I". Evidently, your knowledge of grammar is WORSE than school officials.
Yes, they've also requested... (Score:2)
Schools are putting out bids for cat 5e cable knit sweaters and kneesocks
WTH? (Score:5, Insightful)
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That's like dressing them up in fireproof suits so the students can play with flamethrowers safely.
That would totally rock! I wish I were back in school and you were my principal.
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Even though automatic firearms are illegal for people without the proper permits, gang members still obtain and use them.
To be fair, they're cheaper on the black market, and gang bangers probably want them for things that would be a felony anyway. Would you spend $15k on an AK instead of $300 from a smuggler if you were planning to shoot up your enemy's house?
Technological Solutions.. (Score:2)
Technological solutions shouldn't be used to solve social problems.
Fear of cell phone radiation isn't a technological problem. It's a social one. Namely, unfamiliarity with basic science, and being quick to blame Big Corporations for every little sniffle and sneeze.
Oh, and the phone-use-during-class thing too, have the teacher confiscate the phones.
Quick, someone call Al Gore! (Score:1)
No increased cancer in 50's radar techs (Score:2)
Who were often exposed to massive EMFs.
There were many who were stationed in Greenland who would stand in front of the antenna to get warm.
No increased cancer rate!
Okay, lets make this clear now. (Score:1)
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This protects students from radiation that cell phones emit, they do NOT block calls, text messages, etc.
So it blocks the radiation, but it does not block the radiation?
Sounds like a great investment, IMO!
-Rick
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Usually, the student will be located _inside_ their clothing while objects like cell towers will be located _outside_. If this is not the case then maybe your school board has bigger problems than they had originally expected.
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That's a pretty neat trick, getting the radiation to go everywhere 'outside' but not 'inside'. How's that work when the student has their back to the cell tower?
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That's a pretty neat trick, getting the radiation to go everywhere 'outside' but not 'inside'.
It was a neat trick when the trick was invented in 1836, but it's pretty mundane now.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faraday_cage
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It was a neat trick when the trick was invented in 1836, but it's pretty mundane now.
Oh lord, you're so clever. That has nothing to do with the situation, unless you think the students clothes are a Farady Cage. Somehow I rather doubt that they are completely enclosed in conductive mesh.
Reality check: It's a pocket with a liner that blocks radiation in one direction. You can't stop radiation from going "inside" their close without also hindering its transmission to everything behind them.
Or in other wo
You know the really sad part? (Score:2)
This is a ploy by the battery manufacturers (Score:5, Funny)
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You don't see all the implications... School administrators would rejoice if the batteries went dead.
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It's almost as if cellphones need some sort of onboard switch that allows you to selectively decide when it's ON or OFF... No, that's probably too futuristic for most people to comprehend anyway.
You would get years for that. Off switches will be illegal in the future, especially on your personal tracking devices.
onboard switch (Score:2)
It's almost as if cellphones need some sort of onboard switch that allows you to selectively decide when it's ON or OFF... No, that's probably too futuristic for most people to comprehend anyway.
Why would you want to turn your phone off and render its tracking signal unreadable by your friendly government? Are you a terrorist or something?
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as, lacking sentience or life, most philosophers would agree that they also lack any real traditional sense of "self"
You are clearly using last year's model.
But seriously, I anthropomorphize all my devices. We get along a lot better that way.
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"But seriously, I anthropomorphize all my devices. We get along a lot better that way."
You really shouldn't anthropomorphize electronics - they HATE it.
hmmmm (Score:2)
This could be an interesting angle... clothing designed to limit the "damage" from cell phone signals....
So you line the pockets with a metalic mesh.... and as an added benefit... those milimeter wave scanners at the airport should be blinded too.
I was wondering how to market metalic mesh lined pants :)
-Steve
misread (Score:2)
Looks like the purpose isn't so much to block cell phones, but to stop the electromagnetic radiation.
While most studies show it to be harmless, some studies say that kids might be more susceptible to any damages it might cause.
Clothes are bad, m'kay. (Score:1)
Look, why don't we just let people be to what they want to be exposed to. Why would we want clothes to emit something that counteracts something else. Keep clothes pure.
Honestly, why must we keep inventing ways of counteracting what we know exists rather than just fix what exists first?
I'm not trying to troll here, but it seems that we are all for self experimentation.
For example, We have knows cigarettes are a big cause for cancer since the mid 70's or 80's yet we (humans) keep smoking that crap.
We've kn
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Look, why don't we just let people be to what they want to be exposed to.
Being generally libertarian in nature, I'd agree with this except that we're talking about school kids as young as elementary school age. So, for example, your cigarette example is great... I think people should be allowed to smoke if they want, but the smoking age is 18 in most states.
Kids are being brought up in a world where which cellphone they have and their availability to send and receive messages determines their self worth.
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True the Adults versus child differnces make complete sense in your response, but parents need to then make the decisions for their children. If they are concerned whether the science is true, ultimately it comes down to parents taking control of what their children are exposed to. And thus back to my initial arguement, if we let ourselves use stuff that may or may not be bad for us, we are in that essence self-experimenting.
Maybe my arguement would have been better addressed to the parents of this world,
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First, the clothes don't appear to be "emitting" anything. I don't speak Russian, so I can't get the technical details, but it appears that they are using some form of micromesh that shields the user from some of the radiation from a cell phone. The clothing itself does not emit any radiation, it's a passive block.
As to fixing the radiation, I can't say as I disagree, though I've heard many different stories on the results of studies, but better safe than sorry, I suppose. Does lead to a slight problem.
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Because there are no known mechanisms for non-ionizing radiation to cause harm (except thermal damage; cell phones aren't nearly powerful enough for that), the burden of proof is on those claiming that cell phones cause harm. These things have, in fact, been extensively studied [badscience.net], and the majority of studies backup what we expect from a general understanding of the electromagnetic spectrum: cell phone signals don't cause harm. The few studies showing problems can be simply dismissed as outliers.
The best way t
Overview site (Score:2)
I see a new X-man being born (Score:1)
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Well, it would be kewl if my (hypothetical) kid could shoot solar-powered blasts out his butt (like Cyclops, but from the other end). But with my luck, s/he'd just end up with 7 fingers on each hand.
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I wish I didn't spent my mod points already so I could mod GP up.
And wait, Cyclops is solar-powered?
Many people here are condemning cell phone use, but how many people here sit in front of CRTs, multiple cell phones, pagers, Blackberries, etc? I thought the main concern for damage was that they can get warm and are kept in pockets near the testes (for men), which can interfere with sperm production. If I was so concerned about microwave/radio radiation I'd wear a tinfoil hat and live in a metal box in
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I always just assumed that non-ionizing meant no DNA damage. I never considered a catalyst system.
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You don't understand. The main argument against cell-phone-induced damage is that the microwave photon energy (which is proportional to the frequency) is insufficient to break chemical bonds. However, that argument goes out the window if even much lower frequency EM radiation is found to still be able cause DNA breakage.
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There is a relation. What the experiments at 60 Hz show is that EM fields with very low photon energies (the photon energy is proportional to the frequency) can still cause biochemically appreciable effects such as DNA breakage.
The main reason that microwave-frequency EM radiation (which cell phones emit) has been claimed to be safe, at least in the low-power non
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Is it really that hard to directly test the microwaves they're interested in, rather than just testing with whatever equipment they had laying around?
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What makes you assume that their experiment was motivated by an interest in microwaves? Studying the physiological effects of 60 Hz fields is mighty interesting, as that is the power-line frequency.
Cellphones are officially safe though (Score:2, Insightful)
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The full story might still be written on this one. According to CORPORATE studies (or studies funded by corporations) they are safe. Government studies are almost as questionable because the corporations and the government are so closely aligned. It's only when something catastrophic happens that the full truth comes out. Don't get me wrong, I am not one of the tinfoil hat crowd but one doesn't know the long term results until some time has past.
Its not clear that cell phones are safe. (Score:1)
The long time effects of cellphones hasnt been properly researched yet. The problem is nobody knows if its dangerous yet. In ten-twenty years time we will know for sure and some parents may want to be on the safe side.
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WOW (Score:2, Insightful)
This is just another pointless protect our Children BS, why not just suggest every parents should bubble wrap their children before they leave the house
Invent a new problem then make a profit (Score:2)
This is like giving kids paper that can't be written on because kids would use the paper to pass notes to each other.
Note passing, doodling, talking, sleeping, etc. are all just a much of a distraction as cell phones, but schools don't go out and buy expensive gadgets to stop these distractions... instead the teacher uses disciplinary action. Why can't the same be done for cell phones?
One answer is that disciplinary action doesn't generate a profit for the company making this piece of junk.
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Now you're talking about the real problem that needs to be dealt with: The ability for teachers to enforce rules.
Blocking a cell phone will do nothing to address that problem. It may alleviate one distraction (until the students figure out how to defeat the technology... let's not even get started talking about a schools limited funds being spent on a technology war with students, the school will lose and end up broke at the same time), but there are fifty other distractions that still must be dealt with. A
Don't forget... (Score:2)
Oh, and don't forget that, if you're one of those sticklers that doesn't want to immigrate, you should invest in one of those lead codpieces. You wouldn't want to devolve into a "special" now would you...
Paranoia (Score:2)
For those dismissing this as paranoia - which it may be, I don't know - it may help to understand that Belarus has suffered considerably from the Chernobyl fallout.
If I were them, I'd be paranoid, too.
Oven Mitt (Score:2)
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Easy. Remove clothes. Problem solved.
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