• Keep seized phones in metal-plated Faraday bags or other radio-frequency-shielded container until their data can be copied.

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  • Born in 1791, Faraday started out as an apprentice book-binder, reading everything that passed across his desk.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • Faraday is thus arguably the godfather of the current vogue for the popularisation of science in print and on screen.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • Michael Faraday discovered in 1831 that an electric current flowing in a wire induces a secondary current in a neighbouring wire.

    ECONOMIST: Wireless power

  • It lacks the swank of a Faraday Porteur, perhaps, but then you could buy 175 of these for the same money.

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  • The conference is sponsored by the Faraday Institute for Science and Religion.

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  • Faraday's education continued at Davy's workbench, and on an extended tour of Europe, during which Faraday unwillingly stood in for Davy's valet.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • Davy had difficulty seeing Faraday as anything more than his valet, and even tried to block his admission to the Royal Society.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • The technology does exist to cut out mobile phone signals altogether, by forming a Faraday shield, or an enclosure made of conducting material.

    BBC: Who, What, Why: How do you stop mobiles in concerts?

  • Mobile phones must be switched off on site, and the microwave in the common room resides in a Faraday cage to stop radiation escaping.

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  • Faraday eventually succeeded Davy as the British government's trusted adviser on scientific matters, the Royal Institution's star lecturer, and London's foremost populariser of science.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • The star of the lecture circuit at the time was Sir Humphry Davy, who plucked Faraday from obscurity to work as his laboratory assistant.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • One approach is to imprison the chip in a Faraday cage.

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  • As an RF engineer, I question the ability of the inernal antenna to operate properly in a housing of aluminum, which is an excellent faraday shield.

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  • In contrast to Davy, with his charisma and flair, Faraday was a gentle, soft-spoken man whose lectures always put science, rather than the scientist, at centre stage.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • But, as James Hamilton contends in an illuminating new biography, Michael Faraday's story is not just the tale of a young man's rise through the scientific ranks.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • But Faraday quickly emerged from under his mentor's shadow as a scientist in his own right, corresponding with other researchers as an equal, and conducting pioneering experiments with electricity.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • These account for 10% of the total, including Faraday's electric motor (1821), waterproof material (1823), Aspdin's cement (1824), George Stephenson's passenger railway (1825) and the lawnmower by Edwin Beard Budding (1827).

    BBC: Sir James Dyson

  • Christopher Kostarz, 35, of Cardington Road, Bedford and Rosaria Kosijer, 34, of Faraday Square, Bedford were both given a 12-month prison term suspended for 18 months, with 200 hours unpaid work.

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  • Faraday and Davy soon became estranged, and no wonder.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • Pickover examines more than 40 great laws, providing brief and cogent introductions to the science behind the laws as well as engaging biographies of such scientists as Newton, Faraday, Ohm, Curie, and Planck.

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  • Mr Hamilton, who takes a special interest in tracing the connections between the artistic and scientific communities of the Victorian era, considers Faraday's scientific achievements alongside his artistic leanings and strong religious beliefs.

    ECONOMIST: Science

  • Only printing press inventor Johannn Gutenburg, William Shakespeare, William Caxton, who brought printing to Britain, Leonardo da Vinci, Elizabeth the First and the discoverer of electricity, Michael Faraday, were more important than one of the heroes of Welsh history.

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  • The Eureka moment has given way to a more gradual evolution of ideas as global teams of both scientists and engineers replace the often isolated and lucky inventions of the likes of Thomas Newcomen, James Joule and Michael Faraday, he states.

    BBC: NEWS | Technology | Lecture highlights need to share

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