5G Will Cause Cancer ! 5G radiation ?

Friends, in the time of this technology, we are moving very fast, we have seen 2G, 3G, 4G so far. And right now we are using 4G, as well as 5G has come in many countries, so can 5G create a problem for humans, can 5G cause a lot of damage, so in this post, we will talk about 5G.

5G Will Cause Cancer ! 5G radiation ?
5G Will Cause Cancer! 5G radiation?

Friends, can 5G be a loss for human in the list, have you heard somewhere or you may have got a message on WhatsApp that 5G can be very harmful to us, its radiation can prove to be very bad for us.

we're going to explain why we're not so excited about 5G. 5G sounds great, but do we really need it is the question. Carriers have spent a lot of money marketing this to us, and they're throwing around huge numbers like gigabit LTE, which means one thousand gigabits per second, which means 125 megabytes per second download speed. Wow, which sounds impressive. And the theoretical high limit of 5G is 20gigabits per second. That's a lot! Or 2.5 gigabytes per second of download speed.

So theoretically, your iPhone could download an entire Software Update in less than the amount of time it took me to say that sentence. But we're using Wi-Fi for that anyway. So our first point about this is just going to be that the current cell phone plans; the way they're set up; are in no way compatible with these types of speeds. Right. For instance, let's say you have a 3-gigabyte data plan, and you use the user speed they're saying you can get of 125 megabytes per second; 1-gigabit download speeds. Hopefully this isn't too complex.

"Speak in a language we can understand, Mr.Scientist." But if you do it, just take our word for it: It's going to take 24 seconds for you to burn through your entire data plan. And then you're back down to 2G, for instance. Well, that's no good. No good. 24 seconds of high-speed usage? It sounds like what they're going to either need to do is increase the data caps, which probably is gonna happen.

It's gonna have to. Or they're going to throttle your speeds may be down to 4G speeds or 3G speeds, which I maybe probably not going to do that. Yeah. I mean they're going to throttle you back but I don't think it's gonna be great. The other point is that you know, let's say you have a super unlimited plan and they start throttling you back at 22 gigabytes of data, which is pretty common. Yes. 22; 23 is the standard usually. Okay, so I use my phone for three minutes and I'm out of data. That's no good. That's at 125 megabytes per second. Right. It takes three minutes. I mean, 5G is going to make a lot of the plans we have today obsolete. So, now that it doesn't sound so fancy after all,

we need to talk about how much data we actually use, and the truth is that aside from downloading Software Updates or giant games, which usually we do over Wi-Fi anyway, we have no need for speeds that are this fast. Right. For instance, Netflix 1080p streaming video— that's more than enough. Full HD is more than enough for a phone — five megabits per second. So that is .005 of the one gigabit per second. So we got we're talking five megabits per second, which is like five out of a thousand. Yeah. So.

So you don't really need the 5G to stream Netflix that high-quality. No! The truth is you don't need 4G to stream Netflix in high quality. Sure. So 4G, which is what we all have, and we're all like blech! 4G was getting slower for a while. Yeah. Because more and more people were connecting to the cellular networks with 4G phones. So in 2015, it was super fast, and 2016; 2017it got less quick. And then it went back up in 2018 and 2019, and now it's been nice and fast for a while. So Verizon's average 4G download speeds are53 megabits per second. AT&T: 37. T-Mobile: 36. Sprint: 32. 1080p streaming: 5! So we're already like way over.

We have more than we need right now. Right. 5G is great for super high data bandwidth. I mean even the 4K videos — 25 megabits per second, which still falls underneath were the main carriers around right now. Right, with the 4G LTE stuff. Right. So you might be thinking well, maybe I live out in the country and I'm going to get better coverage. Well, that's absolutely false. Because 4G uses a higher frequency spectrum, which means that they're going to have to build more towers, more closely together. It's more towers, more closer together, because the signal doesn't go as far. So it's faster, much shorter.

So the range is less than the 4G right now. Yes. So they're going to build more and more more and more towers to try and, you know, get those 5G speeds to everyone. It's also going to take a while to do that. Yeah. It's going to mean more money and they're going to pass it on to us. They're gonna pass it along to the consumer and raise the price of your plans, so you can have 5G. And what are they gonna do?

They're gonna sell us 5G compatible phones. Yeah, 5G. Well, the first ones are actually coming out. The new Samsung phones are going to be compatible with 5G pretty soon. And there's one — the Samsung — the new Fold phone. That starting price is nearly $2,000, in case you're interested in getting that later this month. Yeah. Yeah. That's a lot of money for a phone. Yeah. At least for me.

So let's talk about one of the real differences here between 4G and 5G. Here's the plus: Latency. So latency is how long it takes for me to send data from me to David, right? Sure. So in 4G, we're talking anywhere between 20milliseconds and 70 milliseconds, twenty one-thousandths of a second. So that's how long it takes with 4G. Pretty fast. And that's how long it takes with 5G. A little bit faster. Much faster, so like, up to 1 millisecond, but, which is faster? They're both fast enough. And to the user, it feels, you know, essentially the same. Yeah, 20 milliseconds, 1 millisecond to a person. Yeah, 19 thousandths of a second faster? Who cares. I'm not going to notice it, but the carriers are going to brag about it. That's for sure.

But the speed of the call has everything to do with the servers and it's already fast enough to do a video call with 4G. There are two other things that are involved in this process. Okay.

Now, as a musician, this might actually be a cool thing though. Here's where latency, I think, could come in handy, where it's 20 milliseconds or 70 milliseconds. If you're playing live music with somebody across the country and there's a 70-millisecond lag, you're going to hear that with the drummer, and things are going to be out of sync. But one millisecond, they're not going to be out of sync. So if you're playing in a live band situation, which really isn't even possible today. People are like, why would I want to play live music with my friend in New York and Europe?

We're going to be able to do that with with5G networks. Theoretically, as long as the other connections are as fast. Well, that doesn't sound like a really widespread usage. Use case? Yeah. Pretty, pretty specific use case: three guys in three different cities trying to play music at the same time. Well, I think it'd be awesome.

I mean it would be cool. That would be cool. But there's also they're gonna have to build the services for that. Just because the network can be that fast, doesn't mean the software is that fast or any of the other things involved are. So another drawback is different carriers are using different frequencies for 5G, so different technologies. So Verizon 5G is not the same as AT& T 5G, which is not the same as Sprint 5G. So, carriers may be locking phones more frequently. It'll be harder to take your phone and switch carriers.

And the compatibility between carriers will be less compatible than it is now. And right now you can sometimes get it them unlocked, sometimes switch to a different carrier, and that might be harder to do once 5G is the standard. And I also heard that I think might be a conspiracy theory, but a whole bunch of people signed this letter, a bunch of scientists.

Well, that's interesting. Yeah. We could link to that letter. We could link to that letter. I think... I think we need some more peer-reviewed research on that. But they were scientists! So they were scientists. Well, I think we'll check their credentials. But yeah, I guess we should. But I guess that's like sort of what we think5G is... Yeah! I mean, it seems... it seems like right now the conversation is 5G is going to be amazing; everything's going to be faster.

But people aren't really looking at — there going to be significant downsides to 5G, if we're taking the 5G networks and just implementing them on the systems we have now. The plans are just incompatible. Many of the phones, incompatible. Everything's going to have to change. Yeah, it'll be interesting to see if the wireless carriers are then willing to say, "You get a 500 gigabyte per month data cap," which would be a really brilliant marketing move.

It'll let them jack up their prices through the roof. So the carriers are going to benefit a lot from this. Plus, they're constructing towers and they'll pass that on to you. And more towers, and their stock prices are going to go way up. And yeah, it's just that they've created this race for themselves. Yeah. That, who's going to be the first to 5G? Well, I think someone already has 5G. I can't remember which carrier does, but there are a couple cities right now that have 5G. Verizon's not coming out with 5G until 2020, I believe.

I thought I saw an article where I think they said some guy was testing it in a Verizon store in Chicago and got some fast download speeds. But there's no point! Maybe it was just a test site. Well, if I'm going to the Verizon store, I hope they have Wi-Fi. Yeah! We have Wi-Fi. There's no point in this thing. Yeah. I mean, well, it'll be interesting to see how the technology grows over time. But right now, 5G isn't as great as it's being made out to be. Right, because we can't use it for anything. Right, there's no point right now. It almost seems like it's a marketing move, like, oh, T-Mobile — we have 5G. Yeah, we're gonna be the first ones to do it.

Samsung, we have the first 5G phone. Oh, nobody can connect the 5G right now, so it's kind of pointless. Yeah, for sure. So that's 5G. We want to hear from you in the comments section below. Are we way off the mark here? We'd like to hear your thoughts on 5G, if you're excited about it. If you're not, maybe someone could come in with more of a data background; some sort of scientist can come in, and a scientist who can confirm or deny the 5G cancer theory — we'd like to hear that too.

Can 5G give you cancer? Here's the truth. Here's the real truth. Thank you guys for reading this post. As I said, leave us a comment down below with your thoughts, and don't forget to subscribe to this blog

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