Arnold Krille wrote:
> Well, there _could_ be some interference as the air around you contains some
> water (called humidity). It could be possible that the electromagnetic waves
> (a) heat up the water making the room you are in warmer (same principle as
> the microwave)
If this were the case, there would be far greater concerns on the basis
of human health. Humans are roughly 90% water and if this electricity
transfer could heat up water molecules in the air, they are likely to
cause all sorts of adverse health effects in any human that might be in
the vicinity.
Erik
-- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Erik de Castro Lopo ----------------------------------------------------------------- "Every time you get a windows programmer asking you to write some ass-backward workaround, think of it as a crack junkie asking you to help stuff his pipe because his hands are too shaky." -- Conrad Parker _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list Linux-audio-dev@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-devReceived on Mon Aug 25 12:15:09 2008
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