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5 ways to reduce cell-phone radiation
06.15
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There's lots of news today about a long-awaited study on cell phones and brain tumors.
The study, to be published Tuesday in the International Journal of
Epidemiology, turns out to be inconclusive: It found no evidence that
making calls with a mobile phone against your ear increases your risk
for brain cancer, but it also couldn't prove that no such link exists,
according to CNN's report.
"The possible effects of long-term heavy use of mobile phones
require further investigation," the study says. Some people, including
GQ writer Christopher Ketcham, who recently published an in-depth look
at research in this area, are skeptical that such a probe will take
place, in part because of the cell phone industry's lobbying influence.
Several European countries have issued precautions about mobile phone
radiation.
But we'll put the debate aside for now. If you are concerned about
mobile phone radiation, here are a few ways to keep these potentially
damaging waves away from your brain.
Not all are 100 percent effective, and several carry a significant geek factor. (If a Bluetooth earpiece can make Hollywood hunk Brad Pitt look creepy, what will it do to you?) But who knows. If hipsters latch on, maybe these add-ons will go the way of bike helmets and become socially acceptable.
Let us know what you think of these tips, and please offer up your own in the comments below.
1. Use the speaker phone: This keeps the phone away
from your ear and, if your phone has a decent speaker function already,
doesn't cost you anything. Downside: Everyone in the office hears your
partner yell at you for forgetting to record last night's episode of
"Dancing with the Stars."
2. Don't talk. Text: This will win you younger friends and social cachet, as long as your fingers aren't too fat to navigate a QWERTY. If you're new to texting (like omg!), wikiHow
has a smart guide to get your started. You probably can't send all of
your communiques in 140-character bites, though. Well, unless you're this girl.
3. Buy a lower-radiation phone: CNET and the Environmental Working Group have published
guides to radiation by phone model. You can use this information to
guide your next cell phone purchase. The downside: This doesn't
eliminate exposure. But, as they say, knowledge is power.
4. Use a headset: Some earbuds are wired to the
phone; other options, like Bluetooth ear pieces, are wireless. Both put
less radiation on the side of your head than a phone, according to EWG.
Downside: Since there's no phone in sight, it will look like you're
talking to yourself while you're walking down the street. Unexpected
bonus: People in music videos do that all the time. And rock stars aren't bothered by onlookers, are they?
5. Talk less: Take this as literally as you will.
You could simply limit your phone conversations, choosing to - gasp! -
meet up with people in real life instead. Or, according to EWG, simply
speaking less during a mobile-phone conversation can reduce your
radiation exposure, too. From that group's guide: "Your phone emits
radiation when you talk or text, but not when you're receiving
messages. Listening more and talking less reduces your exposures." So,
moral of story: less Jay, and more Silent Bob.
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Opens To $242.3M Worldwide
12.21
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Se ha dicho que hay una edad fatal para los pintores
11.17
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Se ha dicho que hay una edad fatal para los pintores,pero que,si la superan,viven mucho tiempo. Algunos ejemplos: Rafael,Caravaggio,Toulouse Lautrec murieron a los 37 años.Pueden agregarse: Modigliani(muerto a los 36),Géricault(a los 33), Giorgione y Seurat (ambos a los 32); pero los octogenarios son muchos: Ticiano,Quentin La Tour,Ucello,Ingres,Matisse,Rouault,Vlaminick,Bonnard,Picasso...
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Found: first 'skylight' on the moon
10.25
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A deep hole on the moon that could open into a vast underground tunnel has been found for the first time. The discovery strengthens evidence for subsurface, lava-carved channels that could shield future human colonists from space radiation and other hazards. The moon seems to possess long, winding tunnels called lava tubes that are similar to structures seen on Earth. They are created when the top of a stream of molten rock solidifies and the lava inside drains away, leaving a hollow tube of rock. Their existence on the moon is hinted at based on observations of sinuous rilles – long, winding depressions carved into the lunar surface by the flow of lava. Some sections of the rilles have collapsed, suggesting that hollow lava tubes hide beneath at least some of the rilles. But until now, no one has found an opening into what appears to be an intact tube. "There's sort of a chicken-and-egg problem," says Carolyn van der Bogert of the University of Münster in Germany. "If it's intact, you can't see it." Finding a hole in a rille could suggest that an intact tube lies beneath. So a group led by Junichi Haruyama of the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency searched for these "skylights" in images taken by Japan's Kaguya spacecraft, which orbited the moon for almost two years before ending its mission in June. Deep cave The team found the first candidate skylight in a volcanic area on the moon's near side called Marius Hills. "This is the first time that anybody's actually identified a skylight in a possible lava tube" on the moon, van der Bogert, who helped analyse the feature, told New Scientist. The hole measures 65 metres across, and based on images taken at a variety of sun angles, the the hole is thought to extend down at least 80 metres. It sits in the middle of a rille, suggesting the hole leads into a lava tube as wide as 370 metres across. It is not clear exactly how the hole formed. A meteorite impact, moonquakes, or pressure created by gravitational tugs from the Earth could be to blame. Alternatively, part of the lava tube's ceiling could have been pulled off as lava in the tube drained away billions of years ago. Radiation shield Finding such an opening could be a boon for possible human exploration of the moon (see What NASA's return to the moon may look like). Since the tubes may be hundreds of metres wide, they could provide plenty of space for an underground lunar outpost. The tubes' ceilings could protect astronauts from space radiation, meteoroid impacts and wild temperature fluctuations (see Can high-tech cavemen live on the moon?). "I think it's really exciting," says Penny Boston of the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro. "Basalt is an extremely good material for radiation protection. It's free real estate ready to be exploited and modified for human use." Blocked passage? But even if astronauts were to rappel into the hole, they might not be able to travel far into the tube it appears to lead into. "I would bet a lot of money that there's a tube there, but I would not bet nearly so much that we could gain access to the tube," says Ray Hawke of the University of Hawaii at Manoa, who has also hunted for lunar lava tubes. Rubble or solidified lava might block up the tube. "It could be closed up and inaccessible," Hawke told New Scientist. NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO), which should be able to snap images of the area that are at least 10 times as sharp, could help reveal more about the hole. And more lava tube openings may be found. The Kaguya team is still combing over images of other areas in search of additional skylights. And Hawke says a proposal is in the works to use LRO's main camera to snap oblique shots of the lunar surface. This could help reveal cave entrances that are not visible in a bird's-eye view. Journal reference: Geophysical Research Letters (in press)
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07.05
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