| Someone needs to go through these with a dosimeter. On a regular basis. Taking the manufacturer's word for it isn't even good enough for software or gas mileage; we rely on third-party benchmarking. And where's the independent safety auditing to check for hardware dose limiting in case of faulty software, for example? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therac-25 You couldn't roll out a medical device like this, but foist it on the public at large and suddenly the testing requirements are very lax. Field testing is essential. You can't just use a model that the manufacturer "kindly" provides for free. (To do proper Consumer Reports, you have to buy a unit on the open market incognito.) And you can't test for wear-and-tear malfunction by using a brand-new model. I found this report: http://publicintelligence.net/nist-rapiscan-secure-1000-reda... Which doesn't mention who provided the unit, and seems content to test it in black-box mode, focused on the externalities and not the actual hardware or software internals. What about possibly buggy software updates? iPhone apps get more auditing trying to release a new version than this thing. |