Any good Cell Phone Jammer Schematics

There's a church in Mexico that has one.

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They're probably illegal in the United States, though.

Reply to
mrdarrett
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Ok, now I see what the confusion is all about, please allow me to clarify. US law doesn't aply to me, I operate outside of US jurisdiction. I sold most of my products to the US, but not phyically in the US. I never had any problems with customs probably because they didn't know what they were looking at, even if the package was opened. The product was mislabeled, I won't say what because I plan to resume operations in the future and don't want to throw the game. LOL

-Leary-

Reply to
mitchell_leary

Ass. LOL

Reply to
Don Bowey

Maybe she designed something like this TRJ-12, 800 watt, 20MHz- 4.2GHz Jammer. It will probably knock out a small city.

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-Bill

Reply to
Bill Bowden

On 3 May 2006 21:57:07 -0700, mitchell snipped-for-privacy@yahoo.com Gave us:

It's a federal offense, dipshit.

Reply to
Roy L. Fuchs

On Fri, 05 May 2006 00:57:12 +0100, Pooh Bear Gave us:

No. It will be the FBI that investigates and prosecutes it based on the bequest of the FCC.

Reply to
Roy L. Fuchs

On Thu, 04 May 2006 07:50:19 -0700, Don Bowey Gave us:

Nope. Unfair.

Simply state that they are to be turned off in your classroom, or you will be ejected for the day. A kid having to run around to others for missed work catch up learns real fast where the on off switch is at. Eventually, it will affect his grade or his behavior.

A set in stone deduction is too far. Make them know the lesson, not just be smacked by it.

A person that uses their turn signals does so all their life, like riding a bike.

Those that don't are assholes that think they get to pick and choose what to abide by or pay attention to.

Yeah... it's a free country, but the things one chooses to do or not do defines their character quite clearly.

Reply to
Roy L. Fuchs

On 4 May 2006 13:44:39 -0700, "Bill Bowden" Gave us:

You can make en. You can buy em. You can sell em.

IF YOU USE ONE, however, you can be put in a federal prison, and have steak every friday.

Shame they don't give life for it.

You stupid bastards (jammer wanna bes).

Reply to
Roy L. Fuchs

On Thu, 04 May 2006 20:47:34 -0700, Don Bowey Gave us:

Trust me... if he is for real... he's toast.

Post here once a week, so we'll know when the big day comes.

Reply to
Roy L. Fuchs

Looks like Ms.Fried who is mentioned earlier couldn't live without her cell phone for even a second.

Reply to
K `Sleep

Right, but is there actually *anywhere* that cell phone jamming is legal? There are surely places where the laws are not enforced, but if a country has cell phone service at all, it almost certainly subscribes to ITU treaties that require it to have communications regulations similar to other countries.

Jamming is really, *really* unpopular with the international telecommunications community.

Reply to
mc

And the Federal Marshals that kick down his door in the middle of the night! ;-)

--
Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I\'ve got my DD214 to
prove it.
Member of DAV #85.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
Reply to
Michael A. Terrell

I should add one more thing your excellent legal advisors haven't told you. If it's illegal to use a jammer, then it's illegal to help someone use a jammer.

Reply to
mc

What's unfair? If it is important, you have a firm rule, you explain it, you enforce it. No whining, no exceptions.

Reply to
Don Bowey

...

I gather you yourself have never made a mistake in your life?

We want students to have their cell phones on when they're outside of the classroom. It contributes to their safety. Occasionally, they're going to forget to turn the cell phone off when entering a classroom. I do not think a student should be heavily penalized just because his phone has rung.

Mine has even rung while I'm giving a lecture. My wife is a heart patient and I want to be accessible in case of emergency regardless of where I am. It is extremely rare for the phone to interrupt me in the classroom (maybe once in 5 years), but it has happened.

What I absolutely would insist on is that if the cell phone rings in the classroom, the student must turn it off (reject the call) rather than carrying on a conversation. No texting in the classroom either. Nor playing chess on your Samsung phone...

Reply to
mc

Faraday cage.

But yes, I'd love a mobile phone jammer, nothing stupidly powerful, just enough to stop every estate agent bellowing out his business while sat on the seat behind me on the train.

Reply to
techie_alison

So, you're wish-washy about rules about students being rude and thoughtless....

Whatever works for you.

Reply to
Don Bowey

--- And we didn't go to Panama and pluck Noriega out of his regime?

And we didn't go to Iraq and pluck Saddam Hussein out of his regime?

If we want you, asshole, we'll come and get you, wherever you happen to be.

---

--- Well, now that you've revealed your M.O. and everyone in the world knows who your ISP is, do you think that they're [your ISP] going to _not_ divulge who you are and where you are when DoHS shows up at their doorstep?

Goodbye, Mr Leary.

-- John Fields Professional Circuit Designer

Reply to
John Fields

The U.S. doesn't want any more assholes - it has enough of its own. As you have quite ably demonstrated.

Reply to
Never Mind

On Fri, 05 May 2006 06:49:42 +0000, Roy L. Fuchs e*******ed:

Only in Dubbya-land, idiot.

Reply to
Never Mind

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