I would love to watch this person glaze over while I explain that they both run at 2.4 ghz and are thus identical as far as radiation goes. The EM spectrum isn’t that complicated a concept, I don’t know why it’s such black magic to so many
It’s not second semester physics, though. It’s like middle school nature & science class. It’s part of understanding the base foundations of our modern world.
Not to mention, we’ve known about and actively used electromagnetic waves since the invention of radio (if we ignore light bulbs and visible light, of course)
Eh, I kind of feel like they tell you about these things in middle school, but you won’t actually understand them well until you take E&M. Up until that point, you’re kind of just accepting what you’ve been told and haven’t been provided in depth knowledge of the subject. Compared to understanding why radiation is ionizing vs non-ionizing, how it behaves, interference, etc.
I would love to watch this person glaze over while I explain that they both run at 2.4 ghz and are thus identical as far as radiation goes. The EM spectrum isn’t that complicated a concept, I don’t know why it’s such black magic to so many
Because they don’t understand it, and fearing something is much easier to do than to take second semester physics.
It’s not second semester physics, though. It’s like middle school nature & science class. It’s part of understanding the base foundations of our modern world.
Not to mention, we’ve known about and actively used electromagnetic waves since the invention of radio (if we ignore light bulbs and visible light, of course)
Eh, I kind of feel like they tell you about these things in middle school, but you won’t actually understand them well until you take E&M. Up until that point, you’re kind of just accepting what you’ve been told and haven’t been provided in depth knowledge of the subject. Compared to understanding why radiation is ionizing vs non-ionizing, how it behaves, interference, etc.
Really, really depends. I got told about that in high school.
You don’t need a physics class. I’ve never taken one and I still know how radio waves work. Learned about it from Wikipedia.
According to a 2020 report by the U.S. Department of Education, 54% of adults in the United States have English prose literacy below the 6th-grade level.
If a Bluetooth and a WiFi got in a fight, who would win?
The microwave
The tooth, obviously. The tooth goes into the wifi.
I suspect they’d simply choose not to believe you. I can imagine they’d ask for a source, and then immediately dismiss any source you could provide.
I’ve worked with these people.