James Bass
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
the one you would put in your pocket would have an antenna like a walkie talkie.
But if you were looking to install one on a vehicle, it would not have a built in integrated antenna, you would have to have an external antenna for the signal to broadcast.
Correct, depending on what you purchase.
You can, yes.
Or you can just purchase one for, they usually run about $100, $150, like the one you're displaying here.
That's probably a $100, $200 unit.
That's exactly what they're probably trying to establish.
A small unit has a very small area that it can jam.
It's got to be close to the device to actually stop the signal.
So what they're looking is houses that are going to be close, trying to establish a timeline or possibly a route in or out of the neighborhood based off of a signal interruption.
well first back to the the fiber optic issue um the reason i don't believe it would be a fiber optic issue is because the camera brought was was transmitting at this point so if fiber optic was cut prior to the incident you would not have had these images recovered on the back end uh from from nest so the way secondly the way this signal jammer would work
Is as Bob said, there's a very.
Small radius that it can actually kill signal to overwhelm a signal transmission.
So if it is in use and it's doing its job as it's driving past homes, you may see not necessarily.
When I say an Internet loss, you're not going to see a router go offline necessarily.
But you may see some of your connected devices.
You may notice, you may get an internet signal or a notification that your doorbell stopped working.
There was a break in service or a driveway monitor or something.
As it drove past, it interrupted a signal and there was a record made somewhere.
So knowing this, it would help you establish a timeline if there were a sequence of interruptions through the houses going down the road, you know, in and out.