1/7/2009
Wednesday morning

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Contents: Finnish Executives Jailed for Software Piracy (Edupage) Cellular phones and Pacemakers: a RISKY Combination (Peter M. Weiss via Duane Thompson) The Road Watches You: Smart highway systems may know too much (Simson L. Garfinkel) Using a car alarm to steal a car (Kevin Purcell) Final Program for COMPASS 95 (John Rushby) Safety through Quality Conference, 23-25 Oct, Cape Canaveral, Florida ``Cybercritical (Cliff Stolls new book) (Edupage) Re: Portable phone interference in hospitals (Derek Hill) Re: CyberWinter: A Forecast (Arthur A Mcgiven) Re: Outrage! of the Month (Jeff Grigg) Year 2000? Dont forget 1752! (Matthew D. Healy) Re: Floating-point time (Andrew D. Fernandes, Peter Ludemann, Phil Brady) Re: Radar-detector messages & cop-car computers (F. Barry Mulligan, Mark Seecof, Richard Soderberg) Info on RISKS (comp.risks), contributions, subscriptions, FTP, etc.
1. Leather garments, 2. other leather products like wallets, hip-pouches, cellular phone covers, leather belts, etc., 3. finished and semi-processed leather (goat, sheep and cow leather), etc.,
The Wireless Technology Group says studies show that in some cases cellular phones placed near the chest can cause pacemakers to recalibrate themselves or stop and restart. The advisory group warns that new digital pocket phones are of particular concern -- especially since their numbers are likely to proliferate once personal communications services are widespread. No such effects from the older analog cellular phones have been observed. A spokesman for Medtronic, a pacemaker supplier, says the company is advising patients with pacemakers to turn off their portable phones when the phone is in a shirt pocket, to hold the phone 10 to 12 inches from the chest when using it, and to hold the phone to the ear opposite the side where the pacemakers implanted. (*Wall Street Journal*, 28 Apr 1995, p. B1)
GLOBAL WIRELESS GROUPS MOVE TO EASE TRAVEL CALLING FOR USERS Issue: Wireless The two largest wireless telephone consortiums, GSM Association and the Universal Wireless Communications (UWCC), have agreed on an international pact that eventually could allow about 290 million cellular phone subscribers to use their phones almost anywhere they travel. The consortiums represent two of the three incompatible digital-wireless standards used in the U.S. Members of the GSM Association use the global standard for mobile communications (GSM), which is the single standard in Europe and has an estimated 220 million cellular customers worldwide. The UWCC represents companies such as AT&T that use the time division multiple access standard (TDMA) and those operators serve about 70 million users. The third standard in wireless, code division multiple access (CDMA), is used by companies such as Sprint and has 35 million users worldwide -- but is not part of the pact. This new pact will allow customers.
I sell waterproof protective cases for wallets, cellular phones, cameras, GPS units, VHF/UHF radios, and pagers. The protective cases are waterproof to 65 feet. If you are interested in purchasing one please email me at the above address.
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