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handy-fashions.com
verner
gleden med mobilen
The
perfect link between up to date fashion and highly effective microwave
protection.
Events
handy-fashions.com
presented in German technology museum
On
January, 26th. , 2003, Germany´s largest technology museum, the
Heinz Nixdorf Museum in Paderborn, presents products from handy-fashions.com
within an exhibition on mobile phone technology. The products will be
shown on the cat walk with life models.
____________________________
handy-fashions.com
presented in US technology museum
The
Bakken Museum in Minneapolis, USA, a museum of electricity and magnetism
in the life sciences, founded by Earl Bakken (the inventor of the wearable
cardiac pacemaker). Presents products and information from handy-fashions.com.
http://www.thebakken.org/
International
media on handy-fashions.com
Internasjonale
media om handy-fashions.com
USA/international
CNN,
21./22. nov. 2002
Hat to combat cell phone health worries
Tuesday, November 19, 2002 Posted: 1904 GMT
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Story Tools
OSLO,
Norway (Reuters) - A Norwegian-based group launched a novel baseball-style
cap this week to shield users of mobile telephones from radio emissions
that some people fear can trigger cancers.
The "Mobile Cap," going on sale for 385 Norwegian crowns ($53)
each, includes a light metal tissue that channels almost 100 percent of
radio waves away from the head while allowing sound to pass through.
"The cap has a layer of woven silver," Walter Kraus, head of
the Handy-Fashions group that produces the headwear, said. "It's
no heavier than a normal cap." The blue or black peaked caps have
flaps that fold down over the ear.
Some people worry that radio emissions from mobile telephones can cause
brain tumors or other cancers. But international studies of possible dangers
have produced often conflicting evidence.
The scientific evidence
A recent study by Australian researchers over three years found that radio
emissions from mobile phones did not trigger tumors in mice, and so probably
did not do so in humans either.
That followed another Australian study on mice five years ago that said
cellular phones could foster tumor growth.
Swedish researchers said that long-term users of first-generation mobiles
faced an 80 percent greater risk than non-users of developing brain tumors.
But a Danish study last year of 400,000 mobile phone users found no greater
cancer risk.
Filtering out emissions
Professor Peter Pauli of the University of the German Armed Forces said
that materials of fine woven metal like silver, copper or steel could
filter out about 95 percent of emissions from a mobile phone.
"Similar tissues are used to shield sensitive items in rockets and
explosives," he said. In military equipment, the metal helps prevent
sudden radio bursts from detonating a charge and so could also deflect
radiation from the head.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copyright 2002 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Norway
it-avisen:
Tor
21. nov 2002 kl. 00:36
Norsk
lue hindrer stråling
Beskytter hjernen
Øreklaffen
foldes ned foran øret under samtaler.
Den
norske oppfinnelsen er heldigvis ikke en nisselue, men en baseball-cap
som gjør hodet ditt strålingssikkert.
Luen
lages av norske Handy Fashions COM AS og er i følge produsenten
99,999 % effektiv i skjerming av stråling mot hodet, samtidig
som lyden fra mobiltelefonen slipper gjennom.
Inne i luen er et lag av vevd sølv som vanligvis brukes for
å skjerme missiler og andre militære effekter fra spontan
detonering.
Det samme materialet kan i tillegg ¯ke signalet og fungere
som en ekstern antenne for telefonen din i str¯k med dÂrlig
dekning.
Synes du ikke at baseball-luen er helt din stil kan du jo heller
kj¯pe den designervesten i s¯lv eller skjerfet som utf¯rer
de samme oppgavene.
Ingen sammenheng
Flere og flere brukere av mobiltelefoner og annet trÂdl¯st
utstyr bekymrer seg for effektene av strÂlingen de blir utsatt
for.
Selv om alle de siste forskningsprosjekter har vist at det ikke
er noen direkte sammenheng mellom mobilstrÂling kreft, f¯ler
ikke alle seg helt trygge. Det er p den annen side dokumentert
at strÂling kan akselerere utbredelsen av leukemi hos pasienter
som allerede er syke.
Sjekk ut Handy Fashions hjemmeside for mer info.
USA
http://www.technologyreports.net/wirelessreport/index.html?articleID=849
Mobile Cap to Combat Phone Health Worries
By Barry Zellen
Winter 2002/2003
For cell-phone users more worried about the potential risk of cancer than
keeping up with fashion trends, a Norwegian company called Handy-Fashions.com
has introduced a product designed for you - and which it claims can protect
cell phone users from potentially cancer-causing radio waves.
This product is none other than the Mobile Cap.
Handy-fashions.com "offers fashionable and specially designed textile
products for cellular phone users," according to the company's website
(www.handy-fashions.com). "Our products are made of a special fabric,
normally used by the military to shield missiles in extreme microwave
exposed environments. Handy-Fashions.com presents the cutting edge of
microwave shielding technology for mobile phones, and it looks fancy and
fashionable, too."
According to the company:
A mobile cap is the most effective tool to protect you and your children
from microwaves whilst using a cellular phone. Don't take any risks, but
still enjoy the convenience of modern communication technology.
The mobile cap is especially important for children and youngsters. With
the mobile cap it is undoubtedly safe to use the cellular phone - even
for children. As long as the mobile cap is positioned between the skin
and the cellular phone, the skin beneath will not be able to absorb the
microwaves. Our special shielding material with more than 99.999 % shielding
ability is a guarantee for that. (read more)
In addition, your mobile cap will increase the reception ability of your
cellular phone during use.
Read all about effective shielding technology by pressing our technology
links - and please, have a good look at our models, too. They look great!
You can learn all about Norway's latest fashion trend at: www.handy-fashions.com.
"The cap has a layer of woven silver," Walter Kraus, head of
the Handy-Fashions group that produces the headwear, told Reuters. "It's
no heavier than a normal cap."
Reuters reported that "The blue or black peaked caps have flaps that
fold down over the ear. Some people worry that radio emissions from mobile
telephones can cause brain tumors or other cancers. But international
studies of possible dangers have produced often conflicting evidence."
Reuters also reported that "A recent study by Australian researchers
over three years found that radio emissions from mobile phones did not
trigger tumors in mice, and so probably did not do so in humans either.
That followed another Australian study on mice five years ago that said
cellular phones could foster tumor growth. Swedish researchers said that
long-term users of first-generation mobiles faced an 80 percent greater
risk than non-users of developing brain tumors. But a Danish study last
year of 400,000 mobile phone users found no greater cancer risk. Professor
Peter Pauli of the University of the German Armed Forces said that materials
of fine woven metal like silver, copper or steel could filter out about
95 percent of emissions from a mobile phone. 'Similar tissues are used
to shield sensitive items in rockets and explosives,' he told Reuters.
In military equipment, the metal helps prevent sudden radio bursts from
detonating a charge and so could also deflect radiation from the head."
You may read the entire Reuters story online at:
http://abcnews.go.com/wire/US/reuters20021118_199.html
Swisserland
L`Hebdo,
No. 48, Semaine du 28 Novembre 2002
Bouclier
d`oreille
Les
ondes des téléphones portables sont-elles nocives? Peuvent-elles
provoquer des cancers? Pour l`heure, l`Organisation mondiale de la santé
n´a toujours pas de résponse claire á ces questions,
et ce malgré les enquêtes scientifiques menées. Alors
que les quatre plus gros opérateurs du Japon viennent de passer
un accord pour financer une nouvelle et vaste étude sur le sujet,
une firme norvégienne semble avoir déjà tranché:
elle lance sur le marché une casquette munie dún rabat sur
l´oreille. Pas question ici de fourrure pour se protéger
des frimas du Grand Nord, mais d´un maillage métallique léger
qui, selon Handy-Fashions (handy-fashions.com), serait capable de faire
barrage aux "ondes nocives des téléphones cellulaires"
tout en permettant une écoute normale. Pour vendre sa "casquette
mobile" (60 francs suisses environ), la firme n´hésite
pas á mettre en avant la nécessité de protéger
les enfants. C.M.
Italy
martedì,
19 Novembre 2002
Libero - Internet & Hi-Tech
Cellulari
e salute: dalla Norvegia un berretto anti-onde OSLO (Reuters)
Una
società norvegese ha presentato un nuovo berretto tipo baseball
per proteggere chi usa i cellulari dalle emissioni radio nocive.
Il "Mobile Cap" contiene un tessuto di metallo leggero che allontana
quasi il 100% delle onde radio dalla testa mentre consente al suono di
passare.
"Il berretto ha uno strato di argento intrecciato", ha detto
a Reuters Walter Kraus, capo del gruppo Handy-Fashions che produce il
copricapo.
"Non pesa più di un normale cappello" che ha due lembi
che cadono sull'orecchio.
Molti temono che le emissioni radio dei telefoni cellulari possano provocare
il cancro. Tuttavia studi internazionali hanno spesso prodotto risultati
contraddittori.
Other
international media appearances of handy-fashions.com
Moscow, Russia, mobilenews
december 2002
http://www.mobilenews.ru/news.phtml
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Spain, Foro Internet (Levante-EMV)
december 2002
redaccion@forointernet.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Belgium,
Guido Magazine
des. 2002
http://www.guido.be
(Student Magazine)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Netherlands,
De Ingenieur
des. 2002
(Dutch technology magazine)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Netherlands,
De Telegraaf
des. 2002
------------------------------------------------------------------------
USA, Wireless Week
www.wirelessweek.com
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Helsinki, Finland,
Helsingin Sanomat
jan. 2003
(biggest newspaper in Scandinavia)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Copenhagen, Danmark,
Komputer for alle
des. 2002
------------------------------------------------------------------------
New York, USA,
IEEE-Spectrum Magazine
jan. 2003
(The IEEE, the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, is an
international professional organization for engineers. The Spectrum is
the monthly flagship magazine sent to the IEEE's approximately 400.000
members and other subscribers.)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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