Not really. And I wouldn't be too worried about the amount of radiation you're receiving, unless your phone's battery contains U-238 or some sort of Palladium. Try calling your service provider and asking what kinds of fissile materials are present in the current model of phone you're using; I'm sure they can help you.
no it cannot charge a computer. a phone battery does not have enough power to charge a computer. maybe it can it the phone battery has a bigger capacity than the computer (which is imposibble)
NO, but it does when the reception of the signal is at the "last bar".
Plants. Say corn for example. It grows and wgen you eat it, it gets smaller
in order to make new phones smaller and lighter, phone batteries are being made smaller and lighter, thus holding less energy and dying faster. sorry dude
the battery
A battery that can be refilled with the energy it has. If it is in a phone, when you charge your phone, you are recharging the battery in your phone.
Things that make other things appear bigger include:magnifying glassmicrocopespy glasstelescopephotography through enlargementsscanned satellite images
Mobile phone radiation and health
The cell phone has changed since the past, making it smaller, wireless, they run on their own battery, the coverage is widely spread out, and you can send and receive text messages.
A VTech battery is a battery that is used for your VTech wireless phone; the battery is basically going to power your phone, and allow you to continue to use the phone when it is not on the base.
Your phone has a battery behind back cover as a power source.
A phone battery can be put into the freezer when overheated. After allowing the phone battery to cool down, remove it from the freezer let it come to room temperature, and place the battery back in the phone. Yes it will work.