Rabu, 22 Januari 2014

will x-ray at airport security harm digital camera electronics?

best security camera system consumer reports on ... is happening inside your apartment with the help of a video camera
best security camera system consumer reports image



georgefath





Answer
No!

Digital Camera Media Safe In Both Carry-On And Checked Baggage, According To Tests By Imaging Industry And Transportation Security Administration
Travelers Still Strongly Advised to Request Hand Inspection of High-Speed Film

White Plains, N.Y Dec. 15, 2004 â Recent tests found no evidence of X-ray scanner damage to digital camera media cards or to the images they hold. The tests of scanner models currently in use in the U.S. transportation industry were jointly conducted by the International Imaging Industry Association (I3A), the leading global association for the imaging industry; SanDisk Corporation, a manufacturer of digital media cards; and the U.S. Transportation Security Administration (TSA).

These findings mean that digital cameras and their image storage media can travel safely in either checked or carry-on bags, which will be reassuring to holiday travelers. And though they were not explicitly tested, it is likely that images on camera-phones will be safe in either situation as well. More care is needed for cameras with film, however, as the X-ray scanners for both checked and carry-on luggage can fog both developed and undeveloped film.

"Our tests should put travelers' fears to rest, that their digitally captured holiday memories won't be damaged in transit," said Lisa Walker, I3A President. "Digital cameras and media can safely go in carry-ons without the need for hand-inspection, which will simplify security checks and make those long lines move a little faster."

The tests of digital media took place at the TSA Security Laboratory in Atlantic City, N.J. A broad selection of media and devices from a range of manufacturers, loaded with detailed images, was subjected to repeated passes through X-ray scanners matching those now in use at transportation facilities. At the end of the tests, the images were unaltered and the devices showed no sign of damage. Complete details on the tested media cards, test protocols and results can be downloaded from http://www.i3a.org/itip.html.

Separate tests were conducted at the same facility to determine whether the walk-through metal detectors or hand-held metal detector wands have any effect on digital image storage media. As with the X-ray scanners, no damage to media or images was perceived from either of these devices.

The technical support center at SanDisk, a prominent manufacturer of digital media, has been closely monitoring the X-ray issue for several years. As SanDisk ships over a million flash memory cards per week, any issues from security devices would quickly become apparent, but the company has received fewer than a dozen reports per year of problems with airport security systems.

"The Atlantic City lab tests confirm our own observations about the durability of digital media. SanDisk tests have shown that images can be stored indefinitely on flash media cards, without deterioration," said Wes Brewer, SanDisk vice president of consumer products marketing. "In fact, we advise travelers that leaving their images on flash memory cards provides the most durable and dependable method of storing and transporting them. Although the various forms and brands of flash memory cards have different manufacturing processes, consumers who buy recognized brands from reliable sources should have no concerns about traveling with their cards through airport check-points."

The digital media test program is an ongoing initiative of I3A's Integrity in Transportation of Imaging Products (ITIP) Committee, which is composed of representatives from Agfa Corporation, Eastman Kodak Company, Ferrania Imaging Technologies, Fuji Photo Film Co., Ltd., Hewlett Packard Company, Ilford Imaging Group, Konica Minolta, Photo Marketing Association International, Photo-Sensitized Materials Manufacturers Association and Sony Electronics.

ITIP has conducted extensive tests over a period of years to assess the effects of security scanning on film products. Test results to date indicate that the X-ray scanners used for screening carry-on bags will damage high-speed film (ISO 800 or greater). For lower-speed film, the problem appears to be cumulative: the majority of damage has been reported when film has undergone more than five passes through X-ray machines.

Accordingly, I3A advises travelers to request hand inspection of their high-speed (ISO 800 or greater) film products, which is explicitly permitted by law. Hand inspection of lower speed film is recommended only when the film has already been subjected to five trips through X-ray scanners. The screening machines used to screen checked baggage and some cargo will damage all film, regardless of speed. Therefore, I3A and the TSA both advise travelers to carry their film with them and never put it in checked bags.

To help make sure the hand inspection service is consistently available, ITIP has enlisted I3A members in an ongoing effort to gather information on implementation of airport film warnings and advisory signage in U.S. airports; the collected reports are summarized and forwarded to TSA.

"Helping passengers understand how to safely and properly carry their film through security screening is certainly a key element of our customer service efforts at TSA," said Ron Sokolov, Executive Director for Customer Service at the Transportation Security Administration. "Our partnership with I3A has been instrumental in evaluating the impact of our screening technologies on different film media and then getting this information to a wide audience that includes amateur and professional photographers."

When the TSA was established in 2001, I3A formed the ITIP Committee to work with TSA to address the issues arising from the effects on imaging products in transit of increased security measures in transportation. In December 2002, I3A and TSA jointly issued guidelines to help travelers protect their film and cameras from security scanning equipment. ITIP's charter also includes advising authorities specifying and implementing new postal sanitization equipment about its effects on imaging materials and how to protect those materials from damage. I3A's research, reports and guidelines are available to the public at no charge on its Web site, www.i3a.org.

About the International Imaging Industry Association (I3A)
I3A is the leading global imaging industry association, driving growth of and setting standards for the photographic and information imaging markets. As the industry focal point, I3A offers a framework and environment where members can quickly find resources to solve critical issues and develop market solutions. Members of I3A work together to find common ground for advancing the industry and to enable better products and services for their customers.

I3A is an accredited Standards Developing Organization, serving as secretariat for the International Organization for Standardization Technical Committee 42 (ISO/TC42) on Photography, and as administrator for the USA Technical Advisory Group for this committee. Information about I3A can be found on the World Wide Web at www.i3a.org or by phone at 914-285-4933.

About SanDisk
SanDisk Corporation (NASDAQ: SNDK) is the original inventor of flash memory and is the world's largest supplier of flash memory data storage card products using its patented, high-density flash memory and controller technology. SanDisk is headquartered in Sunnyvale, Calif. and has operations worldwide, with more than half its sales outside the United States. For more information, visit the company's Web site at www.sandisk.com.


# # #
I3A Press Contactt
Judith Vanderkay
Virtual, Inc.
jvanderkay@virtualmgmt.com
+1-781-876-6208

SanDisk Press Contact
Bob Goligoski
Director of Public Relations, SanDisk Corporation
bgoligoski@sandisk.com
+1 408-542-0463

Is it just possible that the citizens of the USA have nothing left to be proud of, but are proud anyway?




Beavertail


Corruption on the scale of Mexico
Corporate Kleptocracy condoned by the state
Mayors stealing $750,000 a year
Brutal cops and security guards
Fixed elections and fraud everywhere

Agree to Disagree



Answer
1. Rock And Roll
2. Motion Pictures
3. The Marshall Plan for helping to rebuild the world economy after WWII.
4. US innovations in electronics (circuit breakers, integrated circuits, AC transformers, transistors, semi-conductors, microchips, etc)
5. US innovations in consumer electronics (washing machines, dish washers, dryers, electric lights, personal sewing machines, electric razors, electric toasters, vacuum cleaners, microwaves, etc.) [ok maybe Iâm getting ambivalent on this one]
6. The development of the modern public school system.
7. US innovations in electronic computing (ENIAC, IBM, the ABC calculator, Apple, etc.)
8. Proportional Representation (used only limitedly in the US, but key to many other world governments, and developed by US politicians in the late 1700s and early 1800s as strategies for allocating seats in congress to the states).
9. Airplanes
10. American private donations to international charities
11. Hand-held cameras (both Kodak and Polaroid)
12. Americaâs university system, especially for graduate education
13. Americaâs financial, military, and civilian support of the UN (including both public and private donors)
14. American contributions to medical technology, research and the FDA
15. Americaâs military participation in WWII
16. Jazz
17. Polio vaccination
18. The development of commercial telephones and cell phones
19. Video games
20. The US Space Program
21. Electric trains, trolleys and mass transit (we donât use âem enough ourselves anymore but we pioneered them for other nations)
22. Giving Europeans fleeing WWII a home
23. Decimal coinage
24. American contributions to modern written literature (Pynchon, Hunter S. Thompson, Virginia Woolf, Carl Sandberg, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, etc.)
25. American contributions to materials technology (nylon, vulcanized rubber, stryofoam, celluloid, bakelite, teflon, tupperware, etc.)
26. American contributions to sound recording technology (Phonographs, records and tape recordings, microphones, etc)
27. American contributions to television technology
28. The Panama Canal
29. American contributions to other genres of music (pop, country& western, classical, etc)
30. American television programming
31. Americaâs role in the creation and evolution of the internet and web
32. The US constitution, and other legal and political documents
33. Arcwelders
34. Artificial sweeteners
35. Contact lenses
36. Modern elevators
37. Scotch tape
38. Photocopiers
39. Fiberglass
40. Submarines
41. Frozen food
42. Helicopters
43. Broadway, and the Broadway musical genre
44. Comic books
45. The Smithsonian
46. Modern vaccination (for less extreme problems than polio)
47. Westerns as a genre
48. American contributions to dance
49 Magnetic Resonance Imaging
50. Ball point pens
51. Walt Disney
52. American contributions to childrenâs literature
53. Cash registers and other business machines
54. Wikipedia, Amazon.com, Ebay.com, and American cyberculture
55. Bifocals
56. Bubble gum
57. the Global Positioning System
58. The 5 and dime, and now Dollar Stores
59. The Richter Scale
60. Denim jeans
61. America as a tourist destination for international tourists (#3 in the world)
62. American contributions to science fiction
63. Consumer Reports
64. Safety pins
65. Hip-Hop
66. Synthesizers
67. Peanut Butter
68. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
69. Other US Museums
70. Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Pop Art
71. Rollerblades
72. Chomskyâs Structural Grammar
73. Einsteinâs theories of relativity
74. American contributions to anthropology
75. Nozickâs theories of the minimal state




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar