4G Cell phone Jammer Kit: America's newest hero?
4G Cell phone Jammer Kit.
www.jammerbuy.com could be the moniker for the nation's newest
superhero. Or villain. Or upcoming "Saturday Night Live" skit. 4g cell
phone jammer
Right now, it's what you could call a Philadelphia-area bus rider
who's set the online world abuzz with his brazen use of a cellphone
jammer. He used the device to shut down fellow commuters when he deemed
they were yakking too loudly on their cellphones and presumably
annoying everyone around them. mini 4g cell phone jammer
The reaction has gone something like this: What? Wait ... a
cellphone jammer? And then, more often than not: How do I get one? cell phone jamming kit
Apparently, many people have had it up to here with the guy or gal
next to them yelling into a cellphone, going on and on about their
weekend or their lunch or their hair appointment.
"Wait, cell-phone jammers DO exist!? Why aren't they installed in
every restaurant and school across the nation yet?" said one commenter
at the Daily What. lojack jammer
"Hats off to this guy!" "Two-thumbs up" and "I love this guy! He is
my hero" were among the comments pouring in at NBC10.com in
Philadelphia, which broke the story.
These people are not just a bunch of grumpy-pants, mind you.
Researchers at Cornell University have found that the human brain
is particularly irritated by half-heard conversations because they
mess with our mental sense of order. Such noise has even been shown to
be especially distracting and difficult to ignore, to the point of
impairing the listener's performance. cell phone signal blocker
Cell phone jammers range in price from $40 to $10,000 and can be used
as anti-terrorism devices, according to Forbes.com, which reported
similar jammer use by disgruntled and unapologeticcommuters in New
Jersey and New York.
So far, all these jammer vigilantes have been anonymous.
(Cellphone jammers are banned under federal law because they can disrupt
emergency services.)
And, of course, there have been howls of outrage from frustrated
phone users and others touting doomsday "What if" scenarios, such as
needing to contact emergency responders and being unable to do so.
www.4gcellphonejammers.com
But that response seems to be in the minority, and is shouted
down by others who clearly want some peace and quiet: "How in the world
did we survive for over 5,000 years without cell phones?" one commenter
at NBC10.com asked sarcastically.
Cell phone Jammer Man,
who so far has been identified only as Eric, said at first that he was
proud of his ability to enforce silence by using the jammer to disrupt
reception.
But after an NBC10 reporter circled back to him and informed him that
what he was doing was illegal, Cellphone Jammer Man said he would get
rid of the device.
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