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On Sat, 14 Oct 2006 19:01:06 -0800, "Dana"
wrote: "Alexander Grigoriev" wrote in message hlink.net... So it can tell semiconductor junctions of an MP3 recorder from semiconductor junctions of non-recording devices? Th OP question was detection not *any* semiconductor device, but a MP3 recorder. By the way, the recorder doesn't have to be in that room. Enough to have a connected cellphone in a pocket. Yep, and that can be detected. By that you must specifically mean the cell phone. Clear details matter a lot. What you do with the knowledge that the person has an electronic device that may or may not record is up to you and what you want to do. It's essentially useless information because in modern societies every other person has a cell phone or beeper, MP3 player or whatever. One could not conduct business in an environment where they had to make some random speculation every time they came across the existence of an unknown electronic device, but as importantly, it still has not even been established than in any specific scenario, the MP3 recorder would be detected at all. yes it's possible to detect that an object exists, but it's also possible to have a scenario where the testing method doesn't detect it. |
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