Archive for August, 2010


Nokia will set up servers in India by November for its push e-mail service in the country to comply with government regulations, the company said Monday.

The announcement by Nokia comes a day before an Indian government deadline to Research In Motion to provide access to some BlackBerry services to law enforcement agencies. Nokia has the largest share of the smartphone market in the country, according to estimates by research firm Gartner. The company has been running a beta of its Nokia Messaging Service in the country from last year.

The Indian government has ordered service providers offering BlackBerry enterprise server and instant messaging applications to ensure that these services can be intercepted by security agencies by Aug. 31, or face a block of these services.

Indian government officials are meeting in Delhi later today to take a final call on the various solutions proposed by RIM, according to reports.

RIM proposed last week to lead a forum to assist the Indian government on balancing the need for access of law enforcement agencies with the security needs of corporations. The company did not specify who would be the other members of the forum, nor did it address the immediate issue of the ban threat from India.

Access to the enterprise service for security agencies has been a sticking point in the negotiations between the government and RIM, according to informed sources.

Nokia said earlier this month that it was prepared to assist the applicable government authorities with their requests for a high degree of security and was in the process of installing the required infrastructure. The company said on Monday that it follows all local laws and regulations that are required by government authorities. Nokia said it is also committed to protecting its users’ privacy and maintaining their trust.

Although the BlackBerry has attracted considerable attention because of the Indian government’s security concerns about its encryption of data, it is not a runaway success in India as smartphones make up a small part of the mobile handset market.

About 6 percent of the 140 million mobile phones sold in India this year are likely to be smartphones, Anshul Gupta, principal research analyst at Gartner, said earlier this month.

India added 18 million new mobile connections in June, taking the total number of subscribers to 636 million, according to the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India.

A number of companies that had earlier standardized on the BlackBerry are now considering allowing staff to use other devices, like the iPhone from Apple and devices from Nokia, to access corporate mail. IBM already allows staff in India to access mail from other approved devices, while outsourcer iGATE is moving in that direction as its employees are demanding choice.

Some other companies such as Dell and Yahoo in India require employees to use the BlackBerry for official e-mail, but employees who qualify are few, and are usually those who are on the move, according to sources.

Source: Reuters

Telcos told to share speedy Internet

Canada’s telecom carriers must share their expensive fibre-optic networks with wholesale resellers and provide to them the same Internet speeds that they do to their own retail customers, the CRTC has ruled.

The decision is a blow to Canada’s entrenched telcos, which had appealed an earlier version of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunication Commission’s decision to the federal cabinet, it may alter the expansion of advanced networks across the country and into rural areas.

“The cabinet’s decision was a message to the commission that they wanted investment, first and foremost,” Michael Hennessy, Telus Corp.’s senior vice-president for regulatory and government affairs, said Monday.

The CRTC decision, he said, is based on a “wrong” assumption that telcos will continue to invest despite having to share more advanced networks. Mr. Hennessy said that although this may be the case in cities, where telcos are building out Internet-based television (IPTV) to fight the cable companies, it will not be the case in rural areas, because returns on those investments are now even more uncertain.

Smaller Internet service providers (ISPs) applauded the CRTC’s reassertion of its original position, though some expressed concern about the telcos’ new ability to charge 10 per cent more than they did before. It is unclear how much money this will involve for the much smaller resellers.

“This was a good thing to a certain extent,” said Rocky Gaudrault, chief executive officer of TekSavvy Solutions Inc., a reseller based in Chatham, Ont. “As far as what comes next … it will be curious to see what the schematics of the pricing will be.”

In a dissenting opinion to Monday’s decision, commissioner Timothy Denton said it was a good ruling but does not go far enough. “The Commission has not seen fit to agree with the large carriers (cable and telephone) that the time has come to put an end to the leasing of parts of the networks owned by the large carriers, despite eloquent pleas by them to do so,” Mr. Denton wrote. “It has, by the same decision, not approved the means necessary for smaller ISPs to compete effectively.”

In the proceedings that led up to the decision, telcos argued that the current regulatory system favoured cable companies, because smaller ISPs preferred to hook into the phone company networks. The CRTC attempted to rectify this by ordering cable companies to make it easier for ISPs to share, but Rogers Communications Inc.’s senior vice-president for regulatory affairs, Ken Engelhart, said he is unclear what exactly the commission wants the cable companies to do.

Another appeal to cabinet is still possible. Telus said it is mulling further action and a spokesperson for Industry Minister Tony Clement said another review remains possible. “Because the decision by the CRTC can be reviewed by the Governor in Council, it would be inappropriate to comment further,” the spokesperson said in an e-mail message.

Source: The Globe And Mail

India has agreed not to block BlackBerry services in the country for at least 60 days while it reviews a proposal submitted by Research in Motion, the country’s Ministry of Home Affairs announced Monday.

The Indian government and RIM officials have been discussing lawful access to RIM systems for several weeks, and RIM has “made certain proposals for lawful access by law enforcement agencies,” the ministry said in a statement.

India must now assess the “feasibility of the solutions,” the ministry said.

Union Home Secretary Shri G.K. Pillai, as well as representatives from Indian security agencies and the country’s telecom department held a meeting Monday to discuss the issue.

Last month, India threatened to shut down BlackBerry services in the country by Aug. 31 unless RIM allowed the government to monitor activity on BlackBerry services.

“Ministry of Home Affairs have made it clear that any communication through the telecom networks should be accessible to the law enforcement agencies and all telecom service providers including third parties have to comply with this,” the agency said Monday.

On Friday, RIM extended a deal to the government of India whereby RIM would head up an industry forum that would assist with the “lawful access needs of law enforcement agencies” while preserving the security needs of its corporate clients.

India said Monday that the Department of Telecommunications is looking into whether RIM’s India operations should be routed “through a server located only in India.” On Friday, however, RIM denied that locating its infrastructure within India would help the problem because “all data remains encrypted at all times and through all points of transfer between the customer’s BlackBerry Enterprise Server and the customer’s device.”

The Ministry said it will review RIM’s proposal and submit a report in 60 days.

India is not the only country threatening a BlackBerry ban. Earlier this summer, the United Arab Emirates said it would block BlackBerry services starting Oct. 11. Days later, Saudi Arabia said it would block BlackBerry services by Aug. 6, but the kingdom later granted RIM an extension while talks continued.

Source: PC Magazine

Intel Corp.’s (INTC) $1.4 billion acquisition of Infineon Technologies AG’s (IFNNY, IFX.XE) wireless unit marks another step by the chip maker to expand in the wireless device market, an area where it has struggled in the past.

Intel’s need to push further into wireless was highlighted Friday by the company’s surprising warning that third-quarter revenue would fall short of its previous expectations because of weaker-than-expected demand for consumer PCs. Smartphones and other mobile devices have long been a faster-growing segment than the PC market.

In acquiring Infineon’s baseband radio chip business, Intel gains a portfolio of products covering a full range of wireless options, as well as access to the wireless chip company’s customers, including Apple Inc. (AAPL). However, analysts said, Intel will have to innovate to remain competitive in the combative industry.

“For Intel, this is basically them going all in on wireless,” said Jon Erensen, Gartner research director. He added that even with the assets Intel is getting from Infineon, the company still will have to invest “quite a bit” in the business.

Baird analyst Tristan Gerra said Infineon didn’t dedicate research and development for fourth-generation technology, and he warned that revenue for Infineon’s wireless assets could drop drastically over the next couple of years if it doesn’t have a 4G offering and loses Apple as a customer.

“Intel is acquiring the baseband architecture, but it will have to develop on a timely basis a 4G architecture,” Gerra said. “That takes a lot of time, and a lot of large companies have stumbled.”

Intel officials noted during a conference call that growing Infineon’s wireless business is important to the company and Intel will “rapidly apply” its resources to move the wireless business into a leadership position and accelerate development of long-term evolution technology.

The officials also said they have considered a variety of scenarios around Infineon’s revenue projections over the next few years, including losing certain customers, and that even with the most conservative of models, Intel believes the asset acquisition is a good deal that will add to earnings.

During the Internet bubble, Intel used acquisitions to build wireless expertise but found mobile handset chips a drag on its earnings. It eventually sold the product lines to Marvell Technology Group Ltd. (MRVL) in 2006 for $600 million and has struggled to get a strong foothold back in the fast-growing market.

While Intel’s chips are ubiquitous in PCs, most handset makers have opted for lower-power chips geared toward specific operating systems.

The Infineon buy isn’t Intel’s only attempt to improve its wireless operations. The company is working with Nokia Corp. (NOK, NOK1V.HE) on a new mobile operating system called MeeGo and spent $884 million last year to buy Wind River Systems, a fast-growing software firm that helps run cellphones and other “embedded” systems.

Intel also is trying to expand its Atom chip, popular in netbooks, into other mobile devices, a market dominated by ARM Holdings PLC (ARMH, ARM.LN), a British company that licenses microprocessor designs to other chip makers. ARM chips tend to use little electrical power, which extends the battery life of portable products.

Ironically, to fully leverage the purchase of Infineon, which makes chips using the ARM architecture, Intel may have to tout the technology that Atom is competing against, analysts said.

“Intel’s efforts here are a ‘show-me’ story as we feel like we have seen this movie before … and generally remain skeptical of Intel’s ability to execute outside of [the] core CPU market,” FBR Capital Markets analyst Craig Berger noted.

Intel shares recently slid 1.9% to $18.02, down 16% over the past three months.

Source:  The Wall Street Journal

Google has launched a service that lets Gmail users make free calls from their computers to phones, with the service available to Americans and Canadians.

The voice service allows Gmail users to call landline or cellphone numbers from a Gmail account accessed on a computer. Google said calls to the United States and Canada will be free for at least the rest of the year, with calls to other countries offered at “very low rates,” such as two cents a minute to countries including the United Kingdom, France, Germany, China and Japan.

“Given that most of us don’t spend all day in front of our computers, we thought, ‘wouldn’t it be nice if you could call people directly on their phones?’” wrote software engineer Robin Schriebman on the Google blog. “Starting today, you can call any phone right from Gmail.”

The company said the service will initially be available only to Americans, but Google Canada spokesperson Wendy Bairos Rozeluk said Canadians can access it by changing their Gmail settings to “English-US.”

The service is different from Google Voice, which lets smartphone users make free phone calls over a wireless data connection, she said, and the existing computer-to-computer Google Chat feature. Users of Google Voice, which is only available in the U.S., receive their own phone number, which will be displayed as the outbound caller ID when using the new service.

Since Google Voice is not yet available in Canada, this feature won’t be usable by Canadians. Bairos Rozeluk said there was no timeline on when Google Voice might become available in Canada.

Canadians, however, will still be able to make international calls by setting up a payment account on the Google Voice landing page, she said.

Gmail users will see a new “call phone” option added to their chat list over the next few days as the service is rolled out, the company said. Users will have to install a voice-and-video plug-in to take advantage of the service.

Google’s new voice service is a direct competitor to Skype, which offers various types of internet-based calling services. Skype offers free computer-to-computer calling, as well as paid services that allow users to call landlines and cellphones.

Both services are prevented from offering Canadians incoming calls by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. CRTC rules require all phone providers to include enhanced 911, which enables emergency operators to automatically locate callers.

Source: CBC

RIM Is The New Palm

If history repeats itself, BlackBerry maker Research In Motion is screwed.

That’s because RIM appears to be in a very similar position to where Palm was just a few years ago: A high-flying smartphone incumbent, suddenly looking very vulnerable, very quickly, as new competition shoots past it.

That’s not to say that RIM isn’t still selling a lot of BlackBerry devices. It is, and it’s likely to continue to grow, as it expands internationally and as the broader smartphone market continues to grow.

But Palm used to sell a lot of devices, too. And the risk for RIM is that it will increasingly lose the high end of the smartphone market to Apple and Google, and be forced to become a lower-margin, low-end player. And that’s not what RIM investors have in mind for the company.

How Palm became toast

When Apple first announced the iPhone in early 2007, few people in the handset industry were as screwed as Palm CEO Ed Colligan.  Palm had basically invented the touchscreen smartphone — the Treo (via Handspring, a Palm spin-off which it later acquired).  And the iPhone instantly rendered it irrelevant.

Palm had moved too slowly, on both the software and hardware sides. And as smartphones became a consumer story, Palm got smoked. RIM shot past it with the tiny, cute BlackBerry Pearl, and Apple made everyone look prehistoric with its iPhone, a top-to-bottom revolution.

After blowing its smartphone lead, Palm tried to reinvent itself, with a bunch of ex-Apple guys in charge. It even managed to build a solid new phone and operating system, the Pre and WebOS. But it was too little, too late, and Palm had to sell itself to HP earlier this year. Interestingly, RIM was one of the participants in the auction, but it didn’t bid high enough.

RIM is the new Palm

When we attended the BlackBerry Torch launch event in New York a few weeks ago, we couldn’t help but notice how much RIM’s new flagship device lags its competitors, notably Apple’s iPhone 4 and high-end Android devices from HTC, Motorola, and others.

Sure, the Torch can list most of the same features as the iPhone or Android, such as a touchscreen, pinch-to-zoom “multi-touch,” an app store, and a high-end browser based on the Webkit engine. But everything about it feels half-baked and the opposite of smooth. To get to the phone’s sophisticated new web browser, you still had to deal with RIM’s awkward user interface first.

It’s not that the Torch doesn’t work. It’s just that it doesn’t work on the same level as iPhone and Android. It’s as though the RIM designers had seen videos of the iPhone and Android, so they knew who to copy, but didn’t use their rival devices for long enough to know how slick and powerful they felt. Or didn’t care to make the Torch on the same level. Or they didn’t know how to.

And high-end buyers will notice the difference. It’s why the people we know buy iPhones and Droids.  Meanwhile, the people we know who buy BlackBerries buy them because they’re cheap, or because their company buys them, or because they still think they need a plastic keyboard.

How RIM can avoid becoming the next Palm

Assuming RIM actually wants to play at the high end of the market, it needs to make big changes, fast. (If for some reason RIM doesn’t want to play at the high end of the market, its profit margins and stock multiples will follow Nokia‘s into the tank.)

RIM first needs to put someone in charge who actually has the sense of quality to know that what it is shipping today isn’t good enough to seriously compete with Apple or Android, because right now, it’s not. We shudder to think how RIM’s iPad clone will function, for example.

One possibility is that RIM should switch to Android for its BlackBerry devices, so it could continue to offer BlackBerry mail and messaging services, but also harness Android’s superior software ecosystem. Many readers brought up obstacles to this — technical, security, political, business, etc. And sure, it wouldn’t be easy. But RIM doesn’t have many options available. (Especially now that its Palm opportunity is gone.)

RIM could, of course, continue down its current path. But if it doesn’t rapidly improve its software and hardware, it risks losing even more of the high-end of the consumer smartphone market, and competing mostly on price.

By the way, consumers are much more important to RIM than you think: During last year’s November quarter — the last time RIM revealed this stat — non-enterprise customers represented more than 80% of its new subscribers. Sure, RIM will continue to have its enterprise customers — those who don’t leave for Apple or Android — but the consumer market is where the growth is.

Another option is to sell the company quickly, perhaps to Microsoft. The new Windows Phone 7 OS is supposedly pretty good, but Microsoft still lacks a way to get rich off mobile. Selling cheap licenses for an operating system is a small business — especially when rival Android is free. But if Microsoft owned RIM, it could profit from selling software, hardware, and services.

Plus, RIM’s enterprise business and Microsoft’s enterprise business might play well together, once they merged all the software. It would be an integration mess, and a huge risk — Microsoft completely blew its last mobile acquisition, Danger, and has pretty much blown everything in mobile in recent years. But it’s an option.

The big problem is that RIM would be very big bite to swallow right now — it has a $26 billion market cap — and might be too proud to sell to Microsoft today.  Later, if RIM heads further downhill, it could be cheaper, but less useful. Damned if you do, damned if you don’t.

Bottom line

The BlackBerry brand is strong, people still love BlackBerry Mail and Messenger, people still buy lots of BlackBerries, and carriers still like RIM. But the company is now losing the high end of the market to Apple and Google. So RIM needs to make big changes, quickly, or it’s only downhill from here.

Source: SFGate

Adobe Systems patched 20 security vulnerabilities in its Shockwave Player on Tuesday. Most of the flaws could allow an attacker to run their own code on an affected computer.

The vulnerabilities are in versions of Shockwave Player up to version 11.5.7.609, on both Apple’s Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. The patched version is 11.5.8.612, according to an Adobe advisory.

Eighteen of the problems could lead to code execution, while the remaining two are denial of service issues, one of which could possibly lead to remote code execution.

Shockwave Player is used to display content created by Adobe’s Director program, which offers advanced tools for creating interactive content, including Flash. The Director application can be used for creating 3D models, high-quality images and full-screen or long-form digital content and offers greater control over how those elements are displayed.

The problems were discovered by various researchers, and Adobe credited Fortinet and Check Point, as well as anonymous researchers who contributed to TippingPoint’s Zero Day Initiative and iDefense’s Vulnerability Contributor Program, both of which will pay researchers for vulnerability information if they meet certain conditions.

Adobe says its Shockwave software is installed on more than 450 million desktops. Adobe has stepped up its security program as attackers have focused on trying to find vulnerabilities in its applications due to their wide installation base.

Source: Yahoo!

Microsoft’s IE9 look leaks to the Web

Thanks to Microsoft’s Russian subsidiary, the world now has a pretty good idea of what Internet Explorer 9 will look like.

The Russian folks were kind enough to briefly post an image and some details that had yet to be shared about the browser. And although they pulled it down, ZDNet blogger Mary Jo Foley captured the information and screenshot.

More than anything else, the screenshot shows a browser that attempts to offer a minimalistic user interface and leave as much room as possible for the Web sites. When combined with the browser’s hardware acceleration, the hope is to pave the way for Web sites that are as application-like as possible.

Microsoft declined to confirm the details Wednesday of what had been posted to its Russian site.

However, the look is consistent with what IE team member Ryan Gavin told CNET earlier this month about the planned appearance of IE9.

“The browser is the theater,” Gavin said in the interview. “We’re not the play.”

The browser appears to go as far as to allow people to pin certain sites to the desktop and open them in their own windows without any clear indication that they are using IE at all. According to Foley’s Bing translation of the Russian site, there will be certain sites that are “recognized” or “protected” and can be pinned to the taskbar and launched with their own icons.

Microsoft plans to release a beta of the browser at a September 15 event in San Francisco, although this latest leak clearly steals some of the thunder. Up to now, Microsoft had offered several technical previews of the underlying engine, but had yet to show or talk in detail about how the browser would look.

The invitations for the event do mention “the beauty of the Web” and “unlocking the native Web.”

Until now, though, the focus had been on several key features of the browser’s engine, including the hardware acceleration capabilities, improved JavaScript engine, and broader support for HTML5 and other standards. Microsoft first showed those features at the Mix10 event in March in Las Vegas, though it had talked about hardware acceleration as far back as last November’s Professional Developer Conference.

The details on the Russian site reveal a browser that borrows much from Windows 7, including the ability to tear off browser tabs and have them “snap” to a particular part of the screen, similar to the way documents and applications already do in the latest version of Windows.

There is also a unified search and address bar, something already seen in Google’s Chrome. However, having learned from criticism of Google–as well as its own considerable issues with regulators–I’m hearing that Microsoft will make the choice of whether to let the bar suggest sites as you type a completely opt-in affair.

Source: CNET

Garmin on Wednesday announced that it is voluntarily recalling about 1.25 million Nuvi personal GPS navigation devices, about 796,000 of which were sold in the U.S.

The problem? The batteries inside — manufactured by a third-party supplier, of course — can cause the unit to overheat and become a fire hazard.

The units in question are within a defined date code range and have a specific printed circuit board design that, in conjunction with the other parts, can lead to the problem.

Garmin says it has identified the issue in fewer than 10 cases, none of which caused “significant property damage” or injuries.

To determine if your Garmin Nuvi GPS device is involved in the recall — models 200W, 250W, 260W, 7xx and 7xxT, where xx is a two-digit number, are affected — you can visit Garmin’s website and plug your unit’s serial number in.

You can also call:

  • In the United States and Canada, call ? (At press time, Garmin omitted this number. -Ed)
  • In North America and South America outside the U.S. or Canada call +913 397-8200
  • In Europe, Middle East, and Africa, call (At press time, Garmin omitted this number. -Ed)
  • In Asia, call 886/2.2642.9199
  • In Australia, call 1800 113 738; and in New Zealand call 0800 427 652

Garmin says it will replace the battery and insert a spacer on top of the battery next to the PCB before returning the device to affected customers free of charge.

Source: ZDNet

Is Wi-Fi Making You Sick?

Scientists have told us for years that Wi-Fi is safe. But concerned parents can be tough nuts to crack.

Despite years of research and public education, some parents in Canada are blaming their children’s illnesses on the wireless Internet routers installed in their schools, and they’re calling for the setups to be removed.

“Six months ago, parents started noticing their kids had chronic headaches, dizziness, insomnia, rashes and other neurological and cardiac symptoms when their kids came home from school,” said Rodney Palmer, who has two children, 5 and 9 years old, in the Simcoe County school district in Ontario.

He told the Toronto Sun that symptoms started to appear last year when the school board installed wireless networking hardware throughout its schools. Palmer said concerned parents found the microwave signals in classrooms to be four times stronger than signals at the base of a cellphone tower — though that amount was 600 times less than what the government considers a harmful limit.

And that explains why scientists worldwide continue to roll their eyes.

“As far as I’m aware, there is no evidence that any kind of radio frequency radiation (including cellphone towers, cellphones themselves,and also including Wi-Fi) cause any negative health effects,” said Michael First, a professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University in New York City and editor of the DSM-IV, the diagnostic bible for psychologists.

Noting that concerns about electromagnetic radiation have centered on brain tumors, he said, “I believe that all of the studies done to look into this are negative.”

The World Health Organization agrees, noting that the range of radiation exposure from Wi-Fi routers is between 0.002 percent and 2 percent of recommended maximum levels — less than people receive from televisions and FM radios. (Oddly, cordless home phones, which use the same 2.4-GHz frequency, have avoided the same kind of public scrutiny.)

Schools have increasingly installed Wi-Fi networks to aid learning and boost Internet use in classrooms. But worries over microwave radiation continue to fuel a debate over the safety of regular exposure, especially in children.

Susan Clarke, a former research consultant to the Harvard School of Public Health who studies radio-frequency’s bioeffects and was invited to speak to the parents in Simcoe County last week, is not as sure as her colleagues that the radiation is harmless.

“A child’s brain absorbs this radiation maximally,” she told the parents, according to reports. “Children also absorb microwave radiation more readily than adults because they have thinner skulls.”

Clarke reportedly told the parents she believes that such exposure can cause a slew of neurological and cardiac symptoms, including the ones Palmer described.

The Harvard School of Public Health could not confirm Palmer’s findings, nor would it comment on similar findings. And the overwhelming majority of scientists say that evidence of Wi-Fi’s harmful effects remains anecdotal at best, and is often disproved.

Numerous studies over the years have supported the safety of low-level radiation from devices like cellphones –  a recent 30 year study in Sweden could not confirm that they were a hazard — and Wi-Fi routers are even further removed from the body, lessening their impact.

Researchers have shown that those who claim to be “sensitive” to electromagnetic radiation have difficulty determining its presence. One study found that symptoms correlated with those who had been informed of radiation, whether or not radiation sources were actually active — hinting that it could be psychological.

Robert Bradley, director of consumer and clinical radiation protection at Health Canada, noted that “if you look at the body of science, we’re confident that there is no demonstrable health effect or effects from wireless technology.”

The British Health Protection Authority has stated that Wi-Fi equipment emits only a fraction of the signal of common cellphones. “When we conducted measurements in schools, typical exposures from Wi-Fi are around 20 millionths of the international guideline levels of exposure to radiation. As a comparison, a child on a mobile phone receives up to 50 percent of guideline levels.”

But despite mountains of strong evidence proving otherwise, questions about the safety of regular exposure to electromagnetic fields won’t go away.

Last year, British DJ Steve Miller gained notoriety for his claims of Wi-Fi allergies, saying he got severe headaches and dizziness whenever he came close to a wireless signal. Miller later admitted his claims were a publicity stunt.

Public concerns have even pushed Sweden to recognize the ailment as an official disability. But American scientists will take no such action, First said. The official bible of illness, the DSM-IV, is being updated to the DSM-V, but Wi-Fi allergies won’t make the cut, he told FoxNews.com.

“Changes are made based on solid scientific evidence. Certainly there is no good scientific evidence supporting the notion of electromagmetic-radiation-induced cognitive dysfunction,” First said.

Some schools are nonetheless ignoring the scientists and preemptively banning new network installations.

Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario, outlawed Wi-Fi throughout its campus in 2006, when school president Fred Gilbert likened Wi-Fi radiation to second-hand smoke and asbestos.

“We’re just finding out now what some of those impacts are,” he said at the time. A school policy banning wireless networking remains in place today.

John Dance, superintendent of education for the Simcoe County District School board, is taking a more measured approach. Acknowledging the benefits of wireless networking, he said he was wary of taking drastic action. “Nobody’s ever given medical documentation to say that somebody is sick because of this,” he said. As of now, the board has denied requests to shut down the network.

But for Rodney Palmer, waiting isn’t an option. Tired of exposing his children to what he describes as an “experiment,” the worried father says he is looking into finding alternative schools.

Source: Fox News