well funny you should come up with this I have a new DELL Inspiron laptop
- dual core with led display and I fitted a solid state hard drive thinking it would be much better than my old 7yr old DELL ! The new one is worse than the old and has a very high EM field and electric field from the unit, it really does my head in quite quickly. so it goes to show that solid state hard drives and led displays are not the answer in fact they seem to give off more emr certainly with this model, however my initial impressions of the macbook pro are positive they seem very benign but you have to sit infront of one for a while to work that out. puk In a message dated 2/5/2013 7:09:11 A.M. Dateline Standard Time, [hidden email] writes: On February 5, charles _charles@milieuziektes.be_ (mailto:[hidden email]) > wrote: > Apple computers are very high on EMF. > Especially *dirty air*! Yes, I personally would not trust just any Apple computer. The one's I've tried in the stores caused symptoms right away. I've read here that some of the older "Mac Mini" models (without a monitor) were okay, but I think the original question was about more recent computers. I think PC's allow you more flexibility, so you can experiment with different types of monitors, monitor cables, keyboards, mice... and the EMF protection software that I'm aware of runs on Windows computers, not Macs. Marc [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
Administrator
|
On February 5, [hidden email] wrote:
> well funny you should come up with this I have a new DELL Inspiron laptop > - dual core with led display and I fitted a solid state hard drive thinking > it would be much better than my old 7yr old DELL ! Yes, I've tried some of the more recent Dell laptops at work, and agree that they are terrible. My wife has a Lenovo X220 laptop that's not too bad, and it has an SSD and LED backlighting. I thought her older IBM Thinkpad X40 (standard HD, LCD backlighting) was better, though. Marc |
Administrator
|
In reply to this post by PUK
On February 5, [hidden email] wrote:
> so it goes to show that solid state > hard drives and led displays are not the answer in fact they seem to give > off more emr I don't think solid state hard drives or LED backlights are necessarily good or bad -- I have one laptop that has both, and it seems perfectly fine to me (a Lenovo IdeaPad S10-2). I think the factor that causes adverse reactions are elsewhere -- maybe the power supply? Marc |
In reply to this post by PUK
With the model I have it gives off supisngly high emr when on battery power
! I was quite surprised by this, puk In a message dated 2/5/2013 7:23:58 A.M. Dateline Standard Time, [hidden email] writes: On February 5, _paulpjc@aol.com_ (mailto:[hidden email]) wrote: > so it goes to show that solid state > hard drives and led displays are not the answer in fact they seem to give > off more emr I don't think solid state hard drives or LED backlights are necessarily good or bad -- I have one laptop that has both, and it seems perfectly fine to me (a Lenovo IdeaPad S10-2). I think the factor that causes adverse reactions are elsewhere -- maybe the power supply? Marc [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by PUK
hmm... interesting, thank you, puk. models differ, i am sure...
maybe i should add to my 'low emf' apple measurement - and i am able to use it for many hours each day is an iMac... a rather large screen iMac. it has very low EMF. don't know why. don't really care why. i just appreciate that it does. love, patricia On Feb 5, 2013, at 11:16 AM, [hidden email] wrote: > well funny you should come up with this I have a new DELL Inspiron laptop > - dual core with led display and I fitted a solid state hard drive thinking > it would be much better than my old 7yr old DELL ! The new one is worse > than the old and has a very high EM field and electric field from the unit, it > really does my head in quite quickly. so it goes to show that solid state > hard drives and led displays are not the answer in fact they seem to give > off more emr certainly with this model, however my initial impressions of > the macbook pro are positive they seem very benign but you have to sit > infront of one for a while to work that out. |
Administrator
|
On February 5, Patricia Robinett <[hidden email]> wrote:
> hmm... interesting, thank you, puk. models differ, i am sure... > maybe i should add to my 'low emf' apple measurement - > and i am able to use it for many hours each day is an iMac... Unfortunately, there are a wide variety of drastically different computers out there called an "iMac", including ones with the old cathode ray tubes, newer ones with LCD backlit displays, and even newer ones with LED backlit displays. And of course using different CPU processors, power transformers, etc. I imagine that someone with ES may be fine using one particular "iMac" while have big problems with a different "iMac". Marc |
In reply to this post by PUK
I'd like to know which computers have the least dirty air. That's a big
problem for me. Estelle [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] |
In reply to this post by Marc Martin
mine is about 3 years old and is a 27" iMac.
it measures very low in EMF with my meter. and yes, the older ones are higher in emf. i have an older one too. it's in storage. :) i would think it would always be wise to take a meter with you when you go to the store to buy any electronic device. it's so risky. love, patricia On Feb 5, 2013, at 3:43 PM, Marc Martin wrote: > On February 5, Patricia Robinett <[hidden email]> wrote: >> hmm... interesting, thank you, puk. models differ, i am sure... >> maybe i should add to my 'low emf' apple measurement - >> and i am able to use it for many hours each day is an iMac... > > Unfortunately, there are a wide variety of drastically different > computers out there called an "iMac", including ones with > the old cathode ray tubes, newer ones with LCD backlit > displays, and even newer ones with LED backlit displays. > And of course using different CPU processors, power > transformers, etc. > > I imagine that someone with ES may be fine using one > particular "iMac" while have big problems with a different > "iMac". > > Marc > |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |