
Len Saputo, MD is a graduate of Duke University Medical School and board certified in Internal Medicine. He was in private practice in affiliation with John Muir Medical Center in the San Francisco Bay Area for more than 30 years. His approach to healing has evolved from mainstream medicine into “Health Medicine”—an integrative, holistic, person-centered, and preventive style of practice.
This was a conversation I had this morning from one of the top people in this field...
Here some fun facts when we measure pipl's homes. If they're hip, then they have about a dozen microwave transmitters at home: Wi-Fi router, Wi-Fi repeater, cordless phones, wireless keyboards and mice, wireless laptops and tablets, wireless security cameras, wireless doorbell, wireless earpods, lots of Bluetooth shit, wireless baby monitors, "smart" TVs and soon wireless refrigerators talking to wireless toasters and coffee makers.
For numbers please refer to our fun table we created where we use natural microwave background as reference. A typical hip home reads about -30dBm or 300,000,000x above background. 10 feet from their router we read about -15dBm or 10,000,000,000x above background. The router is like totally FCC compliant, because in the US all is copacetic as long as the router stays below +10dBm or 3,000,000,000,000x above background. When we point out that their home might have slightly elevated microwave background, especially in the room where the router lives, they often ask if they're OK if they hang out in the adjacent room. Then I show that the adjacent room reads -25dBm down from -15dBm in the router room, or 10x less, and I then ask: you didn't feel comfy at 10,000,000,000x above background but do you feel comfy at 1000,000,000x above background? That's when I typically get an empty
stare and my question was really just a rhetorical one...
@Healthmedicine
I pick up people's routers a block away!