This application allows you to listen, live, conversations of the police in some countries (USA, Canada, Germany, Italy, etc. ). But nothing in France. Choose what you want to listen by selecting the "Top 50" or desired area, or even what he could say close to you (within 250 miles). I could not believe that these conversations could be live, but it turns out that yes even though it is often difficult to understand everything (they speak too fast for me). You can see how many people listen to a particular radio. Just click on one of your choice and listen . . . and possibly wait for the arrest of David Hasselfoff for driving while intoxicated. The options allow, among other things, to have the information on the frequency you are listening, alert codes (eg 10-10 for a fire fight in progress). I also reassures readers about David Hasselhoff (not Hasseloff as I write) that we should not wait because it is unlikely that we talk to him, at least in the android radio scanner in Los Angeles . The body escánares at airports have been one of the most controversial decisions in aviation safety in recent years. A study by the University of Arizona is adding fuel to the fire and ensuring that more deaths may occur due to radiation, a terrorist attack. Scientists at the University of Arizona have claimed that the probability of dying from the radiation of a whole body scan and a terrorist attack are the same: one in 30 million. Experts say that the beam emitted by the android radio scanner is low and offers a small dose of radiation in the body but because the beam is concentrated in the skin, one of the most sensitive organs to radiation from the human body, dose may be 20 times higher than previously estimated. Even more worrying radiation machines when they are damaged when they are in operation as "a failure in the device could increase the dose of radiation," says one of the scientists involved in the study, Peter Rez. Perez, along with the rest of scientists has studied the radiation dose from the scans using the images produced by them and says not really "there are arguments to continue incorporating these types of machines in airports. " Such devices create an image of the entire body is connected to a computer in a private room. Collect all the natural curves of the human body to detect whether the passenger is in possession of weapons or drugs at the time of boarding. . . .