Dan wrote: >O.K. fair enough. I was definately thinking about the link you gave below. >I'll stand corrected to in the range of 3-5 million times larger than cell >phones.
Sounds reasonable to me that in that range, it would be hard to find problems with cell phones that don't occur with radio towers. Could proximity to the phone vs. lack of proximity to the tower make a difference? I guess part of my problem in understanding all of this is that, despite the fact that I worked in radio for just over 5 years, I really don't have a good understanding of what exactly a "radio wave" is. In acoustic terms, a soundwave is just a graph of moving areas of higher and lower pressure; nothing actually moves from point a to point b. Are radio waves in any way analogous to this, or are their particles that move from one location to another like photons coming from the sun to earth? Or am I even asking intelligent questions here? Thanks in advance to anyone who can help me clear this all up in my head. I appreciate it. Reggie Bautista _________________________________________________________________ Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com
