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Creatrix13 asked:
www.bevolution.org – free download of brainwave model Mobile Phones Radiation – what are the real health risks and facts? Is it safe or not? That is the question. Professor Olle Johansson of the Karolinska Institute in Sweden has researched for 30 years in the electromagnetic radiation field (EMR Download the videolist and his CV in pdf at www.bevolution.dk This interview in 15 parts can change your life when you really pay attention and are aware – your world view will probably transform during the 15 video parts. This is an interview with the world known scientist assoc. professor Olle Johansson from the famous Karolinska Institute in Stockholm in Sweden and professor at The Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm too. The question being discussed is about mobile phone radiation: Is it safe or is it not? Independent researcher in consciousness (energy, frequency and vibration) Morten Julius from Denmark is interviewing the honourable Olle Johansson. The Human Project has produced this interview and you can download documents and get to know more at www.bevolution.dk Thank you for sharing with all you know and wish the best. Stay tuned and enjoy!
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Scobleizer asked:
Adobe Flash on mobile phones has always seemed fairly anemic. The player didn’t support much of what developers were using Flash for and it wasn’t available on a lot of platforms that developers cared about. At the Mobile World Congress Adobe announced a series of efforts, amongst them: 1. a new 10.1 player for Android and Palm, with other platforms coming soon. 2. A new compiler/converter for packaging Flash apps up and shipping them on the iPhone and iPad. 3. A new AIR runtime for mobile phones so developers can ship AIR/Flash apps like Tweetdeck or Seesmic directly onto Android or Palm without doing much additional work, if any at all.
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dovetastic asked:
This weekyour professional microwave operator is going to be doing a microwaving mobile phone marathon for your viewing pleasure. Every 24 hours for the next four days you will see four different brands of recent model compact mobile phones get microwaved. Today we begin by microwaving a Samsung. Please be sure to purchase your $8 copy of the “The Great Microwave Debate of 2009″ between dOvetastic & Jpizzle at: www.cafepress.com dOvetastic microwave Theater thanks it’s viewers for sending in over 70 donations in just the last two weeks alone. If you want to donate something with full credit to you for microwaving you better hurry up and send it in because a large que is forming! If you like the show, be sure to subscribe as subscribers of our show are eligible for a big prize give away on June 1st 2009. *Remember, microwaving food is for morons. You are watching Episode HD Widescreen # Fifty-eight You can request signed and dated original high quality still prints of this episode by artist Kenny Irwin for $75. Limited to 200 prints. This show is for entertainment purposes only, so please DO NOT ATTEMPT these experiments at home. Experiments are produced in a professional environment with proper safety equipment. Would you like to donate an item for professional microwaving by your microwaving operator host at dOvetastic Microwave Theater, the internet’s first and original microwave entertainment show? Simply email pigeonyolk [at] aol.com for details. You will get full …
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SetYouFreee asked:
PLAYLIST: www.youtube.com Appearing during all 4 hours of the show, researcher William Thomas talked about the hazardous health effects of cell phones and wireless devices, as well dangers associated with chemtrails and weather modification. People are being subjected to “electromagnetic smog” invisibly spread by wireless routers, portable phones, and other devices, he said. Just a two-minute conversation on a cell phone causes the blood-brain barrier to open, making one susceptible to neuron damage that might lead to Alzheimer’s, and “instant aging,” he warned. The kids of today who are using cell phones may be unable to mentally function by the time they are 30, he added. Bluetooth phone headsets are also hazardous, as they conduct electromagnetic energy into the ear, he noted. Portable phones inside the home can be worse than cell phones, as their base stations are broadcasting 24-7, producing more signals than cell phone towers, Thomas continued. Migraines, brain cancer, changes in personality, and aggressive behavior are all associated with exposure to cell phones and wireless devices, and children and pregnant women are particularly at risk, he reported. Just carrying a cell phone in your pocket that is turned on can cause soft tissue damage, said Thomas. Weather modification efforts have been on the rise in countries like China and the United States. According to Thomas, the US Air Force is engaged in “weather warfare,” using nanotech “smart particles” to modify …
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jjodonoghue asked:
A snapshot of some of the accessories on keitais – mobile phones – in Japan. Music by thechuckledemographic. www.thechuckledemographic.com Kawaiifying your phone is not restricted to high school girls in Japan, salary men, university students and obachans – grandmothers – are just as likely to accessorise their phones, although Hello Kitty straps are mostly the preserve of school girls. Japan is the first country I noticed this fashion, or obsession, with phone straps. Occasionally some of the accessories are so bulky over the top that you would need a separate bag just to carry the phone in. iPhones are notable by their absence, I have yet to see an iPhone-owner, iPhoner, with a strap. Perhaps kawaiifying phones won’t go global, but Japan’s mobile phone etiquette would be a welcome global standard. Japan has strict rules regarding the use of keitais in public. For the most part these rules are adhered to. For instance when taking trains you are constantly reminded by signs and announcements to set your phone to manner mode ie silent mode and making calls is prohibited. In certain parts of some carriages using your keitai at all is completely prohibited. What this means is you don’t have to listen to the a fellow commuter roaring down the phone delivering the mother of all mundane messages “I am on the train.” Yes we know. There are times when the rules are broken of course, but more often than not the Japanese use their phone to communicate silently, that is, via email …