GPSGuided wrote:...Even seasoned environmentalists and hikers need Wifi for basic communication, blogs and utility services.....
gayet wrote:GPSGuided wrote:...Even seasoned environmentalists and hikers need Wifi for basic communication, blogs and utility services.....
Since when? I don't need WiFi for basic communication as I am out there to avoid communication. A PLB is all I'd need. No WiFi required. Blogging? old fashioned paper notepad and pencil will suffice till back in a technology equipped world. What utility services?
I must have the wrong idea or be living in a different world. WiFi is not needed. But it may be desired by those unable to temporarily disconnect the umbilical cord of constant contact with society.
Strider wrote:gayet wrote:GPSGuided wrote:...Even seasoned environmentalists and hikers need Wifi for basic communication, blogs and utility services.....
Since when? I don't need WiFi for basic communication as I am out there to avoid communication. A PLB is all I'd need. No WiFi required. Blogging? old fashioned paper notepad and pencil will suffice till back in a technology equipped world. What utility services?
I must have the wrong idea or be living in a different world. WiFi is not needed. But it may be desired by those unable to temporarily disconnect the umbilical cord of constant contact with society.
You do realise you don't have to use it if you don't want to, right?
stepbystep wrote:So if the huts on the OLT had wi-fi people would be huddled around their screens, playing YouTube clips, sharing photos and videos etc...This would directly impact those around them. You do realise that? Right?
GPSGuided wrote:stepbystep wrote:So if the huts on the OLT had wi-fi people would be huddled around their screens, playing YouTube clips, sharing photos and videos etc...This would directly impact those around them. You do realise that? Right?
Or more likely, more are on their earbuds and stuck in their own world and not generate loud chit chats within the cabin and campground... Then each nods off to sleep till the next day quietly.
north-north-west wrote:Oh, yeah, sure, 'cause that's what the iGen does. I see it all the time.
GPSGuided wrote:north-north-west wrote:Oh, yeah, sure, 'cause that's what the iGen does. I see it all the time.
These days, I am seeing more of the senior generation stuck on their i-devices... Muttering to themselves.
stepbystep wrote:I've actually put a bit of thought into this and see the intrusion of devices as being inevitable as mobile coverage gets better.
Hallu wrote:As a physicist, I must mention that we know next to nothing on the influence of electromagnetic waves on plants and small animals. Wi-Fi hotspots specifically could be dangerous to small mammals. In Europe we have campaign ads to prevent young children from using mobile phones, as their cranial cavity is much smaller than adults', hence they're more sensitive to EM waves and could develop cancer in extreme cases. Small mammals, which are already the most endangered species in Australia, have tiny skulls and are even more sensitive than children...
Infant head circumference at birth is 35cm, after one year 45cm and when mature is 55cm. Most of the growth happens in the first few years. The issue is more that the brain has not fully developed physically until 2 years after birth; and that the higher rate of cellular turnover increases sensitivity to radiation injury.Hallu wrote:As a physicist, I must mention that we know next to nothing on the influence of electromagnetic waves on plants and small animals. Wi-Fi hotspots specifically could be dangerous to small mammals. In Europe we have campaign ads to prevent young children from using mobile phones, as their cranial cavity is much smaller than adults', hence they're more sensitive to EM waves and could develop cancer in extreme cases. Small mammals, which are already the most endangered species in Australia, have tiny skulls and are even more sensitive than children.
A while back, some US military scientists realized that high voltage power lines would speed up the growth of nearby trees by as much as 30%. Farmers also noticed strange behaviours from their livestock when grazing near those power lines.
Modern society has us bathing daily in a soup of EM waves of different sorts. Radiowaves are harmless, because they have both low energy and high wavelength. But Wi-Fi and mobile signals have lower wavelength (in order to be picked up by a small receptor), and much higher energy (to paliate for their low wavelength which prevent them from going through thick objects). I would hope we'll prevent this treatment to our wilderness.
skog wrote:My opinion to the OP is that I hope we don't get wifi in N'S as I go into the bush to get away from technology and as a father with 2 young boys who live and are schooled in the iage we use this time to explore and use other skills and not sit there surfing the net.
skog wrote:... But if they are using them with the volume cranked then that is when I have an issue and courtesy needs to be shown, which sadly is something that is rare these days.
Empty wrote:" you had better stick to Sydney and make merry with the push,
because the bush will never suit you and you'll never suit the bush"
north-north-west wrote: That's what we need rather than WiFi - a bottleshop in the corner of every hut, with chilled boutique brews for all and sundry.
(Isn't it?)
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