My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

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My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

SuperLaura
Just bought an iPad pro with the newest adapter allowing easy ethernet setup.

Watch my videos to see how to setup and what EMF my meters pick up.

Part 1 (Setup)
https://youtu.be/_Na1dpmv0PQ

Part 2 (EMF readings)
https://youtu.be/nf9NsJFM4fc
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

JDark
Nice videos.
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

SuperLaura
Thanks!! :)
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

roma247
On the one hand, this is encouraging, but the reality is:

1) anything touch screen tends to drive me crazy.  

2) my husband once bought me an iMac and it was lovely, we turned off all the wireless and bluetooth, etc., and there were no readings on any devices we had.  But I couldn't bear to even be in the house for more than 5 minutes.  Even after we packed it back up for return I couldn't have the box--with the unit powered off and unplugged--in the house.  I had to take it out to the garage and put it as far from me as I could.

So I fear that "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio,
Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."  :)

As I am highly sensitive to crazy things like RFID chips and GPS, however, I will allow that it could be something as simple as that (I understand all Apple products have a GPS chip in them to prevent theft) and no one else might react to these things...

Lisa
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

Marc Martin
Administrator
Yes, we do occasionally see reports of problems with electronics even when they are turned off and unplugged.  With some theories about what's going on there -- internal batteries, residual charge, components magnetized or reflecting ambient EMF, etc.

Fortunately I don't think I've ever encountered that problem...
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

SuperLaura
In reply to this post by roma247
Wow I didn't know people could be sensitive to chips, but I guess everyone is different! I am highly sensitive to magnetic fields but I bet most people have no problem cooking in the kitchen, for me cooking is a huge problem due to the high magnetic fields that stoves, burners, blenders, coffee makers, clothing irons etc give off. I hope I don't have any issue with chips... I muscle tested myself and seem to be okay with them.. I wonder why there would be a problem with chips?? Do you know?

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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

Marc Martin
Administrator
Chips can contain crystals, metals, resins, etc. that people can react to.  We've seen people here who cannot tolerate the new kind of credit cards, because they now contain like microchips in them.

Marc
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

roma247
Hi SuperLaura,

Yes, I'm the one who has this strange sensitivity to chip cards.

I wish I could explain it.  More than that, I wish my body would quit it.  ;)

RFID chips should be passive, but the fact that that little coil of metal can act as an antenna that picks up and reflects a specific signal when a chip reader/scanner sends one, does raise the possibility that it can pick up and reflect other signals in the environment...?

Putting my credit card in a plastic sheath and keeping it in an aluminum-foil-lined wallet seems to work.

When my daughters got their passports, however, a plastic bag alone wasn't quite enough.  It was better when I wrapped them in foil first.  

How?  Why?  Who can say?

Homeopathy has helped with the symptoms sometimes.  It is hard to target exactly the right remedy, because as you have already pointed out in other posts, there is some toxicity and other problems with the body that are involved in EHS.  So the long-term effectiveness of Homeopathy to treat this syndrome is dependent upon being able to properly deal with the whole person.

Toward better health,
Lisa
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

SuperLaura
Totally agreed Lisa! Its a complicated thing to deal with as there are so many aspects and it has to do with healing the whole person. And that takes a lot of time and patience. Of course if you catch it quickly sometimes the healing is super fast.

A few years ago I got sensitive to emfs, was bed ridden for a month and then got better almost instantly.

Then a year later I got sensitive again and have been ever since and the healing process is SLOOOOW.

I wish I would have known the first time I got sick to make changes so it wouldn't have happened the second time!
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

Patricia
In reply to this post by Marc Martin
my landlord can't understand how i can detect 
the presence of a cell phone that is turned off... 
or a computer that is turned off.  
i too think it must have to do with the internal 
battery.  and i think that anything wireless is always 
checking in with a cell phone tower or whatever.  
is that your experience?  



On Jun 1, 2016, at 1:32 PM, Marc Martin [via ES] wrote:

Yes, we do occasionally see reports of problems with electronics even when they are turned off and unplugged.  With some theories about what's going on there -- internal batteries, residual charge, components magnetized or reflecting ambient EMF, etc.

Fortunately I don't think I've ever encountered that problem...


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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

Marc Martin
Administrator
On June  9, "Patricia [via ES]" <[hidden email]> wrote:
> and i think that anything wireless is always checking in with a cell phone tower or whatever.  
> is that your experience?  

If the phone has the battery removed from it, then it is definitely NOT checking with the cell tower.

If the phone is turned off but still has a battery in it, then it depends on the phone whether it is doing something.  I have an old 2G "dumb phone" that doesn't need to be recharged for 6 months if I leave it off, so it's definitely not doing anything while it's off.  Meanwhile, others complain that their phones drain the battery even while off, so they must be doing something.

Marc
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

Nasty1ectro
In reply to this post by SuperLaura
Hi Ms. SuperLaura! :)

Thanks for the great videos! The new system works great on my iPhone 6s, my headaches and brainfog are now a non issue since the phone is no longer transmitting RF!
 
Unfortunately now my sensitivities to Dirty Electricity (TWACS) are causing me skin burning & joint pain, poor circulation and reduced dexterity.

Do you think this new system could potentially be powered by a rechargeable battery pack instead of the AC grounded plug with 12W adapter?



Cheers

Don
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

electrohypersensitive
In reply to this post by roma247
I even feel cell phones when they're off or on airplane mode.  I feel it less, but I still feel it.

We also had a tv that was unplugged that I couldn't be near.  So I hear you
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

electrohypersensitive
This post was updated on .
In reply to this post by roma247
"Putting my credit card in a plastic sheath and keeping it in an aluminum-foil-lined wallet seems to work."


But isn't aluminum foil metal?!
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

electrohypersensitive
In reply to this post by SuperLaura
Laura, why do you think you got sensitive again?  Did you do any kind of treatment other than bed rest the first time?
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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

BruceM
Banned User
In reply to this post by SuperLaura
Alas, SuperLaura this is a great video but shows mostly how novices with meters can be fooled.  We all started there, myself included, about 27 years ago.  Many certified Baubiologists have made the same mistake, since their training/certification is, well, technically inadequate is the nicest thing I can say.

Your RF meter starts at 200MHz, and your ELF magnetic field meter tops out at 50KHz or less.  I couldn't read the label well enough...  The other meter I just can't make out, I don't know what it is or what range of frequencies it covers.  The body voltage meter typically tops out at 10KHz, so low as to be utterly useless for virtually anything.  

Near a piece of electronics like that, you will be in the near field for the strong magnetic fields from the dc-dc voltage converters in the unit that change the battery voltage into whatever regulated voltages they need; 3V, +-15V, etc.  These converters for these smaller devices are now in the 100K-1.5MHz range.
So you would want a very sensitive meter for magnetic fields in that range, which doesn't really exist.

A good cheap tool for measuring in this range is the Radio Shack 12-467 AM/FM radio which you can still find on ebay.  Many of the newer AM/FM radios don't work well for this as the tuners are too good. The AM radio is OK for this range of magnetic fields since it has a ferrite rod antenna (coil around ferrite, sensitive to the magnetic field).  AM radios use the ferrite rod/coil antenna because the frequency's wavelength for AM radio is so long that a typical whip antenna would be worthless.  The AM radio is not perfect for this application, since there is no signal strength meter, and only the audible frequency variation can be heard.  So sometimes, it can be fooled by relatively pure signals without an audible modulation.  But by and large, it works well.  Signal strength is determined indirectly by loudness, how much of the AM band is covered and distance to the source needed to hear it.  

It might help you and other readers greatly if you could repeat this with the AM radio included.  You will find it probably screams like a banshee.

Bruce M



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Re: My new iPad Pro Ethernet setup

earthworm
"Many certified Baubiologists have made the same mistake, since their training/certification is, well, technically inadequate is the nicest thing I can say."
I noticed this, it sounds ridiculous but dumbness and the idea of knowing it all already are pretty common among humans.
In addition manufacturers of emf-meters often exaggerate the capabilities of their products.
My Acousticom 2, which is a very nice and handy thing for DECT and wifi and old mobile phones, nevertheless misses out on tv-broadcasting, TETRA and downloading lots of data with a very nearby smartphone.
Important to notice also that when an external antenna is to be used, the frequency curve relates to the meter only.
For instance the Cornet ED85 will not measure much under 700 Mhz with the supplied antenna, despite starting at 1 MHz.
I had terrible experiences with Spectran-meters, which not only emit a lot of emf themselves but show a number of readings that make zero sense, while you may need a torch and a magnifying glass to see them if your eyes are a bit older.
And we can go on, specifications are to be interpreted as indications, not as facts one can count upon.
Also no meter can tell us what frequencies or combinations thereof are problematic for an individual at a given moment.
A weak undetected signal could be much worse than others that cause red warning lights to flicker.
Nothing beats our own sensitivity.
Although i like to play with these meters, especially the Esmog Spion, which detects what other meters do not, although it is sometimes a bit unstable but this is manageable.
By the way, the background readings in the video by the Gigahertz-meter are rather high to my taste.
Where i stay now in house a village, on the bed the electrical field in the same range upto 2kHz ( and upto 100 kHz as well ) is about 0.5 V/m and magnetical field 1.4 nT, the latter coming mainly from a medium-high tension-line and a bit from a transformer-unit, both at 100 meter ( and  more ) distance.
When at night all the electricity is switched off, the fields go down to 0.0 V/m and to 1.3 nT or a little less when everyone sleeps.
I have your meter too which seems reliable but used a Gigahertz ME 3851A,  sound off ( otherwise readings are not precise with this model ) and for the electrical fields putting a wet finger on the earthing-connector ( instead of using the grounding-cable, which is a hassle ). and took the maximum values, depending on the direction.
The worst HF-pollution comes here from radio- and television-towers, at least according to my "RF Explorer".
This is in general an underestimated source of emf, that is hard to escape from.
Now a wild, skinny cat entered the house, so i'm gonna to have a look and maybe a talk ;).