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![]() The phones do communicate regularly with the network. The network must be constantly updated with whose phones are switched on and which cell tower is providing service. (It would be impractical to ring you for an incoming call if the network had to query every tower in the world, "Hey, I have a call for DougSlug. Who has him???") This is a surprisingly common form of Electromagnetic Interference (EMI). The RF is being coupled into the wiring and changing the conduction of the small transistor amplifier inside one of the speakers, the one with the light and switches. At work, I usually know when my co-workers cell phone will ring, because MY speakers emit a bup-bup-bup-buzz right before the ring. See, he usually keeps his phone next to the cubicle panel on his side, but by chance just inches away from my speakers. I have heard the same thing on TV, when a performer is wearing both a wireless mike and a cell phone. I got my first cell phone about 8 months ago and it didn't take long for me to run into this. At work I have headphones on most of the time, listening either to AM radio or to an audio cassette (both from the same Walkman-type unit). Those brief digital bursts occur about every 10 minutes and if the headphone cord is close to my cell phone, the sounds can be very loud in the headphones. I've even heard the bursts coming from the speakers connected to my home stereo, with the audio source not running (connected to CD player, but volume is still turned up), and the cell phone is lying on the table in the next room. As you said, with a bit of practice I can tell if my cell phone is actually about to ring or is just checking in with the network. A couple of days ago the digital pattern was of a type I'd never heard before and when I looked down to look at my phone, I found that someone had sent me a text message (a feature I normally don't use). I mentioned this recently to a friend of mine and he told me about a somewhat similar experience that happened to him when he was a kid, about 25 years ago. He lived in a house with somewhat ancient telephone wiring and, for some reason he never did figure out, the telephone would emit a very brief "ghost ring" right before it would ring for real. That is, it was an electromechanical phone (this was early 1970s) and before the first "genuine" ring, the phone would first put out one very brief "ping." Apparently there was something in the telephone network that would send out a very brief "pip" that would ding the bell just once (the actual ring is a constant string of pulses). As a boy in his early teens, my friend noticed this but said nothing about it to anyone else. Whenever he was in the house and heard that brief "ping," he knew that the telephone would ring a couple of seconds later. He had an aunt who was loud, obnoxious, stupid, five feet in all directions, and totally clueless about technology; whenever she'd come by the house for a visit, my friend would terrorize her by hollering "PHONE'S GONNA RING!!!!" about two seconds before it actually did. She never noticed the "ghost pings." She never did catch on and was totally convinced that he was possessed. Some time later, the tables got turned on him, briefly. Whenever he was in the house alone, with total quiet, sometimes he could hear voices and couldn't figure out where they were coming from. It wasn't constant, either. Very faint whispers. Very strange. They seemed to be coming from the kitchen and he couldn't quite bring himself to believe that he was hearing ghosts. He finally got the clue he needed late one night when he raided the refrigerator and distinctly heard the '70s song "The Sound of Philadelphia" coming from nowhere. He couldn't picture a bunch of ghosts sitting around a kitchen playing disco music, so he poked around and finally discovered the source of all this: a flashlight! It was an old-style flashlight, with two batteries, an incandescent bulb, a metal case, and a big magnet so it would stick to the fridge. Apparently the spring inside the flashlight was forming a junction diode and was rectifying an AM radio station signal. The "voices" were apparently from a talk show during certain hours. |
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