Sense and sensitivity
Dec. 1st, 2006 06:38 pmYesterday's Technology Guardian carried an article entitled Is there any proof that Wi-Fi networks can make you sick?. It answered its question, very reasonably, by saying that there was no proof, but then again, there had been no research capable of providing such proof. It quoted writer Kate Figes as believing that she was sensitive to the presence of wi-fi, that she had installed wi-fi in her home and suffered discomfort which she had resolved by uninstalling the system. The author went on to suggest an experiment to discover whether you, too, have "EMF sensitivity".
I have no view either way on the existence of such sensitivity, but I thought that the article was overlooking something, and I wrote the following letter:
The author of the aticle, Charles Arthur, turns out to be the editor of that section of the paper. He wrote:
I don't think of myself as a subtle person, but maybe this time I was being too subtle...
I have no view either way on the existence of such sensitivity, but I thought that the article was overlooking something, and I wrote the following letter:
Today's Technology Guardian carries a story implying that Kate Figes, finding that her wi-fi installation made her ill, resolved the problem by uninstalling it. This implies that none of her neighbours has wi-fi.I thought this was about as dismissive of the article as was polite.
Your reporter, Charles Arthur, proceeds to suggest an experiment to determine whether you are sensitive to wi-fi: it, too, relies on the ability to switch off the wi-fi radiation (i.e., assumes that none of the neighbours has wi-fi). It wouldn't work where I live.
The author of the aticle, Charles Arthur, turns out to be the editor of that section of the paper. He wrote:
Hi..
Kate Figes made the claim about her Wi-Fi, not me.
For yourself, you could try the experiment by going to a friend's house in
a detached location. Have a Wi-Fi enabled laptop to check for the presence of an stray networks.
Then try the experiment. As I said, get in touch if you get 24 or more of
32.
I don't think of myself as a subtle person, but maybe this time I was being too subtle...