This building built in the 60s has a sign warning you that there's a microwave
This building built in the 60s has a sign warning you that there's a microwave
I was gonna say, I highly doubt there was a microwave oven in the entire city in the 60s.
And you weren’t kidding!
1946: The RadaRange, the first commercial microwave, was sold to restaurants, ship galleys and canteens. This six feet tall, 750 pound microwave sold for around $5,000. ($80,846 today.)
1955: Tappan made the first residential microwave, which was rarely seen in homes due to its staggering size and $1,300 price tag. ($15,294 in 2024 bucks.)
As a kid we went to the University of Michigan hospital every six months for my brother.
One visit we go to the cafeteria for lunch as usual, and there were signs everywhere warning that microwave ovens were in use!
My mom asked one of the staffers what the signs were for and she told us that it turns out these new devices could affect pacemakers in a real bad way.
“We found out the hard way when a few patients went into cardiac arrest right here in the cafeteria! Took them awhile to connect the dots…”
“Oh my god,” my mom said! “Did you lose anyone?”
“Oh no honey…there ain’t no better place to have one of those than in a hospital!”
It would be years before we got one at home, and nobody we knew had a pacemaker.
In terms of electrical interferance, there’s a lot that can go on. NFC transmits power indutively, cellular, wifi, sometimes with power sharing some you transmit electricty inducitvely too.
Apple phone’s have “mag safe” which is basically a magnet. Phone also have speakers and microphones and rumble motors and compasses, all magnetic.
disclaimer: im’m tired and possibly wrong
what does this mean?
Bunker gear:
This joke has been brought to you by the 1970s.
The 1970s: Come for the unrest, stay for the disco.
In fairness if it had a microwave oven in the 60s, I’d probably want a warning if I was just near that building.
It was not a time when things were tested for long-term safety…