5G Poll
5G Poll
To discuss RF burns and cellular damage, you should also mention how handling a hot pan causes the same effects.
The decision to back it depends on a few factors. If it would negatively affect your daily life—like what happened with Pokemon Go—then caution is wise. If you work in customer or tech support for a wireless company, rollouts might be less predictable but generally similar to current 4G and 3G areas. With Pokemon Go, certain spots drew a lot of visitors who didn’t usually come. Pairing those with areas offering strong 5G can encourage people to gather near good coverage points. However, if there aren’t nearby attractions such as shops, hotels, events, or sports venues, the impact is minimal. Right now, indoor spaces struggle with 4G, particularly in convention centers, because owners limit cellular access to avoid charging guests expensive Wi-Fi. With B, Siebel faced challenges when AT&T Wireless used it, and I believe AT&T eventually dropped it once opportunities passed. Back then, AT&T operated multiple systems requiring different logins, adding complexity to the GSM network. It was a rare success, so rollouts may bring some initial issues for many carriers worldwide, especially Verizon, which seems to develop its own solutions for hybrid networks.
Your question focuses on the specifics of 5G technology. It highlights that 5G operates in the RF spectrum, particularly using millimeter waves at frequencies around 29 GHz and 31 GHz. It also notes that mid and low band 5G is quite similar to existing cellular networks.
The UV reaching your skin is non-ionizing. Shortwave UV, on the other hand, is ionizing but is completely blocked by our atmosphere. Still, that non-ionized UV can still lead to mutations in skin cells. Despite your general statement, it’s incorrect—non-ionized radiation can indeed damage cells.
Faster mobile internet stems largely from 5G technology. It’s becoming clear that self-driving cars will arrive soon. Low latency is essential for smooth operation, not just gaming or streaming high-resolution content. There’s much more at play beyond those ideas.