The cell phone jammer prevents the phone from working. They are used in cars, public places and examination rooms.
Mobile phone jammers are not new-they have been around for many years-they are illegal in many countries, including the United States, but the use of mobile phone jammers is growing rapidly.
But is the phone really the problem? Is interference really the solution?
I think the mobile phone shielding device is used as a band-aid, as the wrong solution to solve the two major social problems, it should be solved by better technology.
The following are the two major problems that mobile phone jammers are trying to solve, failure, resolution, and what I think is a better solution.
"The phone is dangerous" question
A Florida man named Jason R. Humphries hopes to save lives by preventing people from using mobile phones while driving in their daily commute. So Humphreys installed a cell phone jammer behind the passenger seat of his SUV. As far as Humphreys knows, the project worked for two years. However, the policemen who occasionally interfered with his communications by his jammer were less excited. So they tracked him down and caught him two years ago. Last week, the Federal Communications Commission of the United States was fined $48,000 for violating the US law on the use of jammers.
As I said before in this space, I think drivers who don’t use smartphones will be distracted by smartphones. In other words, smart phones do not cause accidents, humans do.
The terrible reality is that about 1.24 million people are killed every year worldwide. This is much higher than the number of deaths in the war.
Humphries’ misleading behavior is the wrong solution to the problem. What we really need is to transition to self-driving cars as soon as possible. The sooner we do this, the more lives will be spared.
The'mobile phone is annoying' problem
A Chicago man named Dennis Nicholl was recently arrested on suspicion of using a mobile phone jammer on a commuter train. When photos of the disruptor with him began to circulate online, the police were warned. When the other passengers started talking on their smartphones, Nicole pulled out a jammer, flipped a switch, and all the calls were silent. Nicole's lawyer said his client only wanted a little peace and tranquility.
Comedian Dave Chappelle recently used a product from a company called Yondr and remained silent during his 13 comedy shows in Chicago. Yondr manufactures a lockable radiation protection bag-a Faraday cage. When they entered the stadium, as a condition of admission, Chappelle fans were asked to put their smartphones in a Yondr bag and then locked them. They are allowed to continue to own these bags, but those who want to use their phones must leave no man's land and have them unlock the Yondr bags when they leave.