Amazon Denies Reports That Airport Scanners Ruin Kindle's e-Ink
judgecorp writes "Amazon has poured cold water on the story, but reports insist that Kindles are sometimes rendered useless by airport baggage handling and security checks. Many people report no problems at all but if something is going wrong, the culprit may not be the X-ray scanner, but a static shock."
If this were a problem, wouldn't it also affect nooks and other readers that use e-Ink? The displays are all made by the same company, after all.
so they taught/calibrated a security device with a sample of unknown and questionable origin.. yeap.. sounds like security theater to me.
'...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
The power levels have nothing to do with the safety risk of being smacked in the face by some wayward gadget during a rough landing.
I'd rather be hit by a 5oz Kindle than a 4lbs hardcover.
Normally what the Myth Busters do is at best anecdotal evidence. They certainly can't do enough testing to be statistically significant in this thing. So no. They have not definitively proven anything about electrical interference. Not even close. As they say, an absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. It's likely they are correct that very little interference would happen, but no one is willing to risk certifying that this is so. Nor should you or any other passenger.