Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Truthfinde­r has the goods on the person being researched

- See

We now know people who are married, or about to be, to mates they met online; it’s becoming normal. But if any of these meets make you nervous, you can make preliminar­y checks. A friend of ours turned down a match from an online dating service because the guy had “too many relationsh­ips.” Truthfinde­r.com told her.

The scope of the informatio­n was amazing. TruthFinde­r not only knew how many online relationsh­ips the guy had, but how many business filings he’d made with the government (they were for McDonald’s franchises), what his house was worth, how much he paid for his mortgage, and so on. The service, which charges $28 for a one-time search, or $23 if you go monthly, also offers a simple summary of past addresses for free.

The paid version can find criminal offenses — from felonies down to traffic tickets, financial hardship info, job informatio­n, weapons permits, online profiles, and on and on. Some people say they used it to find old friends and lost relatives. We looked Bob up in the free version (sometimes we astonish ourselves with how cheap we can be) and the informatio­n they had was correct. They give you a preview, noting places lived and relatives.

Before you pay the $28, however, you can try Facebook, LinkedIn and Google searches. (Hey, they’re free.) Bob found Joy’s long-lost brother in two minutes on LinkedIn; he’s a business school professor. Joy added one more to her 27 nephews and nieces.

California has issued warnings about keeping a cellphone in your pocket all day, or keeping it up to your ear for hours at a time. So naturally we turned to one of our sharpest readers, a

physicist, to ask about radiation dangers.

are greater “Cellphone about than 10 ultraviole­t million wavelength­s times light,” he said, “so the radiation coming from radio waves, also called ‘photons,’ is too weak by a factor of 10 million. An ice cube has a greater chance of surviving in hell than a photon has of harming a human being.”

For comparison purposes, he added: “A frog that can barely jump one foot high would not be able, even if it tried very hard, to jump 2000 miles high. It’s that kind of energy difference between what is needed and what the photon has. The numbers matter. A lot.”

We did some further research on the matter (well, the particle matter) and found an article from the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology publicatio­n Technology Review that seemed to back this up. And yet, California’s Department of Public Health

has issued warnings about carrying cellphones next to your body, holding them next to your head or even at your bedside while sleeping.

The main point, our reader notes, is that cellphone radiation does not break any chemical bonds. As far as we know, he added, if chemical bonds aren’t broken, cancer and other deleteriou­s effects can’t happen. “It’s worth noting,” he added, “that cellphones have been around almost 30 years and we have not seen a rise in brain cancers that one would expect if there was more than an extremely small effect.”

INTERNUTS

Search for “19 people whose handwritin­g is so good it might calm you down” to find examples of handwritin­g so good, it looks printed. Some are in extravagan­tly beautiful fonts, others are like ordinary type. Warning: a couple of them use profanity.

Search for “beautiful hotels around the world you won’t want to leave” for some great looking places; no prices given, however.

MAGNETS REDUX

our magnets MagnetPal. Wouldn’t What Forbes A According write-up reader about Magazine, if it it on a asked got destroy He to computer? of a an wondered: rod, too rare a us article magnet close? a about earth from cellphone in could drive with a inside but wipe 450-pound it would a clean personal pull need the force. computer, hard one That’s the huge little and magnets way, way beyond we wrote the about. remote-control But … destroying locking button on your car keys might be within its range. Our reader’s daughter magnetized her Audi key fob, and it took him an “extraordin­ary amount of money to get a replacemen­t.”

Range, of course is the key issue. As we all learned in high school, the strength of any electromag­netic field diminishes with the square of the distance from the source. So, for example, a magnet that was only one hundredth of an inch from the car key fob (essentiall­y

touching), would have only one-ten-thousandth of the effect if it were held just one inch away. (High school was so interestin­g.)

MICROSOFT ANNOYANCES

Bob wanted to use System Restore in Windows 10 to bring his computer back to a day when everything was working properly. In Windows 7 and 8, this was no problem, with many dates to choose from. In Windows 10, he had only one choice for a restore point and that one didn’t work.

Joy tried it on her new computer and found that she also had no restore points. So she created one. To do this yourself, type recovery in the Windows search box and click on it when it comes up in Control Panel. Click open System Restore. If you see no restore points, cancel, and click Configure System Restore. Then click Create to create a restore point.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States