which can be detected from a distance - with specialized equipment

This Linux will allow an ordinary radio to play Beethoven's Fuer Elise from your monitor
http://www.dirk-loss.de/tempest-showroom.htm
I eh . . .

i like my radiation
Mind you, there are "people" claiming today that the GHz band cellphone signals aren't dangerous because they are non-ionising. Time will tell. Luckily, for those of us who spent part of our lives in the period of the above mentioned old colour television sets, we didn't tend to sit right in front of them very often - so it is re-assuring(?) to believe the "experts" who tell us that modern CRT monitors no longer radiate sufficient radiation to do us any harm. Too late for me anyway... the old colour sets got me and the (amazing 50's vintage black and white projector TV unit my father brought one day - talk about a high intensity crt), as did the high-powered ham radio transmitters my father used to operate - not to mention the radar systems I used to test on the bench next to me when I was a technician working for "Ferranti's" in my student holiday days...X rays can be produced in vacuum tubes when the electrons are accelerated and strike the anode. In the vast majority of situations, the intensity and energy of such x rays are so low that any radiation is effectively nonexistent. However, when very high voltages and currents are employed, the x-ray production can become significant. The prime example of such a situation was the generation of x rays in early color television sets (ca. 1965-1970). The three major sources of x rays from these sets were the picture tube, the vacuum tube rectifier, and the shunt regulator tube. The latter (designations 6EF4 and 6LC6) were a particular problem. Over a third of the 6EF4 tubes tested produced exposure rates above 50 mR/hr at a distance of nine inches, and exposure rates up to 8 R/hr were observed at seven inches with one defective tube! Modern television sets have essentially eliminated the problem of x-ray production however.
More here.TV receivers and computer monitors containing CRTs no longer pose a risk of emitting excessive x-radiation. Since the creation of the federal performance standard, the FDA has tested hundreds of TV receivers and computer monitors and rarely encountered any that were unsafe.
Back in the 50's, it was common for shoe stores to have xraybugman wrote:i like my radiation
a little bit is good for you, like those people who go into radium mines
but cheaper