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Comments on ‘Battery firm: iPhone could melt your brain’Friday 9th November 2007 17:01 GMT
it seems unlikely any judge is going to accept such reasoning should a case come to trial.
Anonymous Coward • Friday 9th November 2007 17:08 GMT
Urrm, wana bet? All you need is enough Mums crying about how there kids got cancer of the ear, and they may win. Judges are sometimes compitant, but also sometimes total ludites who dont listen to technical experts. Especaly in the US. Snake Oil indeed
whitespacephil • Friday 9th November 2007 17:10 GMT
Well if you're really that worried about your brain melting, you should probably be worried about other stuff too. Why not buy lots; preferably really big ones, and make yourself an igloo-like brain-melting, radiation-free zone. Or just worry about something else. Believe it or not, but there is one certainty in life. love the URL
Brian D. Switzer • Friday 9th November 2007 17:18 GMT
hehehe... The URL for this story is apt. Kudos. Hmm
Anonymous John • Friday 9th November 2007 17:35 GMT
Then there is no scientific evidence that these special batteries are safe either. Which won't stop copper nanotubes from buying them. Tin foil hat?
Martin Owens • Friday 9th November 2007 17:52 GMT
I thought that is what tin foil hats were for, blocking out the CIA radio waves; but could work for phones, even iPhones. I propose a ban on the phrase "snake oil"
David • Friday 9th November 2007 19:09 GMT
seeing as it has turned out that snake oil actually works... http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?articleId=F7B4BAF7-E7F2-99DF-3870FFECA70C38C9&chanId=sa013&modsrc=most_popular Re: I propose a ban on the phrase "snake oil"
Nicholas Moore • Sunday 11th November 2007 01:11 GMT
Whilst Chinese snake oil may have worked, due to it's high content of "EPA", it is widely believed that the variants that were sold in America during the 1900's didn't contain the same EPA, and therefore were "Snake Oil". http://www.it-observer.com/articles.php?id=1219 Safety
Chris Fryer • Monday 12th November 2007 15:52 GMT
The Department of Trade and Industry reports 11,111 accidents involving telephones in 2002, the most recent year for which figures are available. 1,415 accidents were caused by batteries that same year. This contrasts with 2,829 accidents involving ironing boards, 513 involving biscuits and a mere 103 where a pillow case was implicated. Only 21 were hurt by a "zoo or circus animal". Still, using the telephone seems safer than tangling with vegetables, which claimed 15,437 victims that year alone. the brain drain that gives you "frequency"
anthony bingham • Monday 12th November 2007 20:07 GMT
Crossing legs or eyes and even fingers is a great and inexpensive way to ...hope for the best ... while convincing friends and relatives of early onset cerebral meltdown probably caused by the ol' phone thingy ... the answer ,before it is too late ; "get chipped" and just like next doors dog, listen to classic FM on your collar clip and be reassured of a trip home if you get lost and cannot remember your name , service provider or just pissed your pants ! . The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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