Question: Why does my Nextel freak out the speakers on my computer and other devices? Is this thing shooting cancer beams into my head or what?
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Question: Why does my Nextel freak out the speakers on my computer and other devices? Is this thing shooting cancer beams into my head or what?
Mine does the same thing...I've noticed something else. I wear mine on my right shoulder while at work. Looks like I'm growing a second set of eyes on the right side of my neck. :smiley40: Guess I'm mutating.
Speakers, especially amplified speakers are prone to interference. The speaker amp is basically a broadband amplifier set for audio frequencies. The speaker wire is supposed to carry the input signal to be amplified, but is often poorly shielded. This means that the wire also makes a decent antenna. The amplifier in the speakers amplifies the undesired signal as well as the desired one.
Mine does it also, no eyes on the side of my neck as far as I know, but then again nextel has horrable service here and it keeps getting worse, just riding out the rest of my contract.
If I set my phone on my laptop the speakers will click when it send's/recieves a signal. Early warning for phonecalls or texts :smiley2:
The worst problems are caused by older Amplitude Modulated signals, (HF Ham radio, CB, Am band commercial stations and shortwave stations) since this is the type of modulation audio amps and speakers are designed to input and use. With a strong enough signal and/or a long run of wire, you can hear the transmissions over the speakers directly if you're close!
Cheaply made electronics and radio enthusiasts have long been at odds because of this. The government, in it's infinite wisdom, decided to make it the unlicensed users responsibility to shield and filter their home electronics equipment against legal, licensed, and clean transmitting stations (Read the little FCC tag on your TV that say's this device must accept interference from a licensed station and not produce any harmful interference to licensed stations.), but not to set any standards for companies to build their equipment to.
So, what you get is people buying cheaply made electronics and thinking it's the transmitters fault for causing the interference! This assumption, and complete ignorance of how electronics and the FCC guidelines work, causes radio enthusiasts to get a bad name. It also causes them to go to court a lot more often than they should.
But I digress!
RF radiation is not the same as ionizing radiation, which can damage cells. The worst thing non-ionizing radiation can do is induce voltages in metal, or induce thermal effects in dense enough materials (think microwaves). The effects are totally dependant on the power and frequency of the signal, and the proximity to the transmitting antenna. Cell phone's radiate in the microwatt range. Hardly a concern. So, I'm going to say no, your Nextel isn't mutating or cooking you.